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Sungju Park-Kang - Fictional International Relations: Gender, Pain and Truth

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Sungju Park-Kang Fictional International Relations: Gender, Pain and Truth
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This book proposes the idea of fictional International Relations (IR) and engages with feminist IR by contextualising the case of a woman spy in Korea in the Cold War.Fictional imagination and feminist IR encourage one to go beyond conventional or standard ways of thinking; it reshapes taken-for-granted interpretations and assumptions. This takes the view that a dominant narrative of events might be reconstructed as a different kind of story, once events are placed within a wider temporal approach. The case of the woman Korean secret agent- who reportedly bombed a South Korean plane (Korean Airlines (KAL) Flight 858) under the instruction from the North Korean leadership to disrupt the Seoul Olympic Games- is chosen to serve as an effective example of fictional IR and feminist IR scholarship, which can be investigated through the research puzzles concerning gender, pain and truth.Fictional International Relations has three main objectives. First, it investigates the way in which fiction-writing can become a method for dealing with data problems and contingency in IR. Second, the book examines how gender, pain and truth operate or interact in the case of the Korean spy and how this observation can strengthen feminist IR in terms of intersectionality. Finally, the author goes on to explore why this case has been so difficult to study openly and thoroughly. The aim of the book is not to refute the official findings; the point is to unpack complex dynamics surrounding truthmore specifically how the official account has been executed as the truthbased on a feminist-informed investigation.This book will be of interest to students of IR theory, critical security studies, Cold War studies, gender studies and Asian studies.

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Fictional International Relations may sound like an oxymoron, but it isnt. Reading Sungju Park-Kangs innovative case study of the mysterious cold war downing of flight KAL 858 makes me realise anew how much we all try to make sense of politics amidst uncertainty, how much we employ imagination to make that sense, and how much a feminist curiosity aids us in that daunting effort. I recommend Fictional International Relations to all readers who are candid enough to admit that international politics is riddled with uncertainties.
Cynthia Enloe, Clark University, USA
Fictional International Relations
This book puts forward the idea of fictional International Relations (IR) and engages with feminist IR by contextualising the case of a woman spy in Korea in the Cold War.
Fictional imagination and feminist IR encourage one to go beyond conventional or standard ways of thinking; it reshapes taken-for-granted interpretations and assumptions. It takes the view that a dominant narrative of events might be reconstructed as a different kind of story once events are placed within a wider temporal approach. The case of the woman Korean secret agent who reportedly bombed a South Korean plane (Korean Airlines (KAL) Flight 858) following instructions from the North Korean leadership to disrupt the Seoul Olympic Games is chosen to serve as an effective example of fictional IR and feminist IR scholarship, which can be investigated through the research puzzles concerning gender, pain and truth.
Fictional International Relations has three main objectives. First, it investigates the way in which fiction-writing can become a method for dealing with data problems and contingency in IR. Second, the book examines how gender, pain and truth operate or interact in the case of the Korean spy and how this observation can strengthen feminist IR in terms of intersectionality. Finally, the author goes on to explore why this case has been so difficult to study openly and thoroughly. The aim of the book is not to refute the official findings; the point is to unpack the complex dynamics surrounding truth more specifically how the official account has been executed as the truth based on a feminist-informed investigation.
This book will be of interest to students of IR theory, critical security studies, Cold War studies, gender studies and Asian studies.
Sungju Park-Kang is a guest researcher at the School of Global Studies, University of Gothenburg, Sweden.
Series: War, Politics and Experience
Series Editor: Christine Sylvester
Experiencing War
Edited by Christine Sylvester
The Political Psychology of War Rape
Studies from Bosnia and Herzegovina
Inger Skjelsbk
Gender, Agency and War
The maternalized body in US foreign policy
Tina Managhan
War as Experience
Contributions from international relations and feminist analysis
Christine Sylvester
War and the Body
Militarisation, practice and experience
Edited by Kevin McSorley
The Politics of Protest and US Foreign Policy
Performative construction of the war on terror
Cami Rowe
Joy and International Relations
A new methodology
Elina Penttinen
Women and Militant Wars
The politics of injury
Swati Parashar
Fictional International Relations
Gender, pain and truth
Sungju Park-Kang
First published 2014
by Routledge
2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon OX14 4RN
and by Routledge
711 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10017
Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business
2014 Sungju Park-Kang
The right of Sungju Park-Kang to be identified as author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers.
Trademark notice: Product or corporate names may be trademarks or registered trademarks, and are used only for identification and explanation without intent to infringe.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Park-Kang, Sungju, 1977
Fictional international relations : gender, pain and truth / Sungju Park-Kang.
pages cm (War, politics and experience)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
1. International relations. 2. International relationsPhilosophy.
3. FeminismMethodology. 4. Feminist theory. 5. Political fiction
I. Title.
JZ1253.2.P37 2014
327.101dc232013042472
ISBN13: 978-0-415-71861-5 (hbk)
ISBN13: 978-1-315-86971-1 (ebk)
Typeset in Times New Roman
by Wearset Ltd, Boldon, Tyne and Wear
To ghosts of KAL 858
Contents
This is a remarkable work of scholarship that takes scholarly method into the realms of the imagination as a necessary step for understanding a complex web of narratives and actions.
Flight KAL 858 disappeared shortly before the Seoul Olympics in South Korea and it was presumed to have been attacked and destroyed by North Korean forces seeking to disrupt the Olympics. Very little wreckage was found, there was no evidence of an explosion and none of the passengers was ever seen again. Then, in 1987, on 1 December, a female North Korean intelligence agent was captured and accused of planting a bomb on KAL 858. She was brought to Seoul a few days later on the eve of the South Korean presidential election. She confessed to the bombing just before Christmas. This all caused a huge stir, but she was also a stunningly beautiful woman, so the press reportage and national debates about her assumed an air of sensation and scandal. A tragedy became overladen with soap opera.
Not only did the agent confess, she repented. Not only did she repent, she fell in love with her interrogator and the two married. She was released and wrote several books about her background and mission. All of this simply deepened and extended the soap opera surrounding her. But South Korean opinion was far from convinced that she was speaking and writing truthfully.
What Sungju Park-Kang has done here is to meticulously compile all the available evidence about the bombing and, where evidence and enigma meet, he has written a fictional international relations account to suggest what might have happened, and to suggest the human and emotional horizons of the case. He writes like a novelist and renders an account of what happened that is moving, but no longer traduced into soap.
Sungju Park-Kang backgrounds his work with conceptual enquiries into gender and pain, and their relationship with truth. The result is a very unusual but moving and, I feel, deeply influential enquiry into an episode of cold war politics which may never have any real answers except in the imagination that seeks to be empathetic with what might be truthful.
Stephen Chan
School of Oriental and African Studies
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