바로가기메뉴

본문 바로가기 주메뉴 바로가기

ACOMS+ 및 학술지 리포지터리 설명회

  • 한국과학기술정보연구원(KISTI) 서울분원 대회의실(별관 3층)
  • 2024년 07월 03일(수) 13:30
 

Korea Journal

  • P-ISSN0023-3900
  • E-ISSN2733-9343
  • A&HCI, SCOPUS, KCI

Civilian Victims in Wando-gun from the Liberation until the Korean War (1945–1950)

Korea Journal / Korea Journal, (P)0023-3900; (E)2733-9343
2016, v.56 no.4, pp.33-61
https://doi.org/10.25024/kj.2016.56.4.33
박찬승 (한양대학교)

Abstract

According to reports published by South Korea’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission (jinsil hwahae-reul wihan gwageosa josa wiwonhoe) in 2007–2009, the number of civilian victims in the Wando-gun area between 1945 and 1950 was around 1,000. Why did Wando-gun have so many casualties? Five reasons might be provided: (1) during colonial rule, the socialist independence movement was quite active in Wando- gun; (2) the police conducted left-wing mop-up operations in Wando-gun from 1945 to 1949; (3) during the Korean War, when police and the North Korean Army held their ground for six weeks in Wando-gun, mop-up operations of regional left-wing suspects occurred; (4) the North Korean Army, along with left-wing sympathizers, executed many people associated with the right-wing during their occupation of the island; and (5) after Wando-gun was restored to the South, police conducted strict interrogations of suspected traitors and executed many without trial. The case of Village A in Soan Island, where anti-Japanese nationalists were housed during the colonial period, can be regarded as representative. However, left-leaning sons and nephews of these nationalists were pursued and either executed or imprisoned by police. Those remaining during the Korean War were arrested and shot by police or had to flee to the mainland.

keywords
Korean War, Wando-gun, Soan Island, left wing, socialist movement, civilian victims

참고문헌

1.

Ahn, Jong-cheol. 1991. Gwangju jeonnam jibang hyeondaesa yeongu (A Contemporary History of the Gwangju and Jeonnam Regions). Seoul: Hanul Academy.

2.

Han, Si-jun. 1993. Hanguk gwangbokkun yeongu (A Study of the Korean Liberation Army). Seoul: Ilchokak.

3.

Jeong, Geun-sik. 1995. “Jipdanjeok yeoksa gyeongheom-gwa geu jaesaeng-ui ji- pyeong” (Collective Historical Experience and the Horizon of Its Revival). Sahoe-wa yeoksa (Society and History) 47: 184–232.

4.

Kim, Dong-chun. 2000. Jeonjaeng-gwa sahoe (War and Society). Seoul: Dolbegae.

5.

Kim, Seok-hak, and Im Jong-myeong. 1975. Gwangbok 30 nyeon (Thirty Years since the Liberation). Vol. 3. Gwangju: Jeonnam Ilbo Co.

6.

Park, Chan-seung. 1993. “Iljeha soando-ui hangil minjok undong” (The Anti-Japanese Movement on Soan Island during Japan’s Colonial Rule of Korea). Doseo munhwa (Journal of the Island Culture) 11: 81–123.

7.

Park, Chan-seung. 2001. “Iljeha wando-ui hangil minjok undong” (The Anti-Japanese Movement on Wando Island during Japan’s Colonial Rule of Korea). Jibangsa- wa jibang munhwa (Local History and Local Culture) 4.1: 133–172.

8.

Park, Chan-seung. 2010. Maeul-ro gan hanguk jeonjaeng (The Korean War in Villages). Seoul: Dolbegae.

9.

Park, Chan-seung. 2014. Hanguk dongnip undongsa (History of the Korean Independence Movement). Seoul: Yeoksa Bipyeongsa.

10.

Wando History Compilation Committee, comp. and ed. 1977. Wandogun ji (A History of Wando). Wando: Wando History Compilation Committee.

11.

Wando History Compilation Committee, comp. and ed, comp. and ed. 1992. Wandogun ji (A History of Wando). Wando: Wando History Compilation Committee.

Korea Journal