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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

Disability History and Minjung as Affect

Disability History and Minjung as Affect

Korea Journal / Korea Journal, (P)0023-3900; (E)2733-9343
2024, v.64 no.4, pp.87-110
https://doi.org/10.25024/kj.2024.64.4.87
소현숙(Hyunsoog SO) (한국여성인권진흥)

초록

With the decline of research on minjung history, the argument for a new minjung history that would critically inherit it was proposed. This new minjung history, it was emphasized, should break free from the representation of minjung that centered class or nation and focus on the multivocality of the minjung. This article examines research trends in disability history and explores the relationship between disability history, minjung history, and new minjung history. The discourse on minjung during the 1970s grasped the disabled as part of the marginalized minjung, but this was more as a way of recruiting their bodies at a symbolic level to represent the oppressed and marginalized minjung than any serious contemplation of the structures of discrimination against disabled persons. In the narratives of the minjung movement, which picked up steam in the 1980s, the emphasis on the productivity and subjectivity of the proletariat made it difficult for the disabled, whose bodies were unsuitable for production and struggle, to become visible. Despite this, disabled persons were inspired by the minjung movement and appropriated or parted with the concept of minjung in their own ways in the disability movement from the mid-1980s. This study traces this process, examines how disability history resonates with new minjung history, and proposes that new minjung history approach the minjung as affect instead of a substantial actuality in its encounter with minority history.

keywords
minjung history, new minjung history, disability history, symbol of the minjung, affect, identity politics

Abstract

With the decline of research on minjung history, the argument for a new minjung history that would critically inherit it was proposed. This new minjung history, it was emphasized, should break free from the representation of minjung that centered class or nation and focus on the multivocality of the minjung. This article examines research trends in disability history and explores the relationship between disability history, minjung history, and new minjung history. The discourse on minjung during the 1970s grasped the disabled as part of the marginalized minjung, but this was more as a way of recruiting their bodies at a symbolic level to represent the oppressed and marginalized minjung than any serious contemplation of the structures of discrimination against disabled persons. In the narratives of the minjung movement, which picked up steam in the 1980s, the emphasis on the productivity and subjectivity of the proletariat made it difficult for the disabled, whose bodies were unsuitable for production and struggle, to become visible. Despite this, disabled persons were inspired by the minjung movement and appropriated or parted with the concept of minjung in their own ways in the disability movement from the mid-1980s. This study traces this process, examines how disability history resonates with new minjung history, and proposes that new minjung history approach the minjung as affect instead of a substantial actuality in its encounter with minority history.

keywords
minjung history, new minjung history, disability history, symbol of the minjung, affect, identity politics
투고일Submission Date
2024-07-01
수정일Revised Date
2024-09-08
게재확정일Accepted Date
2024-10-16

Korea Journal