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Seeing Like a Child: Inheriting the Korean War
Contributor(s): Han, Clara (Author), Rechtman, Richard (Foreword by)
ISBN: 0823289451     ISBN-13: 9780823289455
Publisher: Fordham University Press
OUR PRICE:   $94.05  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: December 2020
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Social Science | Anthropology - Cultural & Social
- Biography & Autobiography | Cultural, Ethnic & Regional - Asian & Asian American
- History | Asia - Korea
Dewey: 303.660
LCCN: 2020919000
Physical Information: 0.5" H x 5" W x 8" (0.66 lbs) 208 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

An utterly original and illuminating work that meets at the crossroads of autobiography and ethnography to re-examine violence and memory through the eyes of a child.

Seeing Like a Child is a deeply moving narrative that showcases an unexpected voice from an established researcher. Through an unwavering commitment to a child's perspective, Clara Han explores how the catastrophic event of the Korean War is dispersed into domestic life. Han writes from inside her childhood memories as the daughter of parents who were displaced by war, who fled from the North to the South of Korea, and whose displacement in Korea and subsequent migration to the United States implicated the fraying and suppression of kinship relations and the Korean language. At the same time, Han writes as an anthropologist whose fieldwork has taken her to the devastated worlds of her parents--to Korea and to the Korean language--allowing her, as she explains, to find and found kinship relationships that had been suppressed or broken in war and illness. A fascinating counterpoint to the project of testimony that seeks to transmit a narrative of the event to future generations, Seeing Like a Child sees the inheritance of familial memories of violence as embedded in how the child inhabits her everyday life.

Seeing Like a Child offers readers a unique experience--an intimate engagement with the emotional reality of migration and the inheritance of mass displacement and death--inviting us to explore categories such as "catastrophe," "war," "violence," and "kinship" in a brand-new light.