Heroes and Toilers: Work as Life in Postwar North Korea, 1953-1961

Heroes and Toilers: Work as Life in Postwar North Korea, 1953-1961

by Cheehyung Harrison Kim
Heroes and Toilers: Work as Life in Postwar North Korea, 1953-1961

Heroes and Toilers: Work as Life in Postwar North Korea, 1953-1961

by Cheehyung Harrison Kim

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Overview

In search of national unity and state control in the decade following the Korean War, North Korea turned to labor. Mandating rapid industrial growth, the government stressed order and consistency in everyday life at both work and home. In Heroes and Toilers, Cheehyung Harrison Kim offers an unprecedented account of life and labor in postwar North Korea that brings together the roles of governance and resistance.

Kim traces the state’s pursuit of progress through industrialism and examines how ordinary people challenged it every step of the way. Even more than coercion or violence, he argues, work was crucial to state control. Industrial labor was both mode of production and mode of governance, characterized by repetitive work, mass mobilization, labor heroes, and the insistence on convergence between living and working. At the same time, workers challenged and reconfigured state power to accommodate their circumstances—coming late to work, switching jobs, fighting with bosses, and profiting from the black market, as well as following approved paths to secure their livelihood, resolve conflict, and find happiness. Heroes and Toilers is a groundbreaking analysis of postwar North Korea that avoids the pitfalls of exoticism and exceptionalism to offer a new answer to the fundamental question of North Korea’s historical development.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780231546096
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Publication date: 11/06/2018
Series: Studies of the Weatherhead East Asian Institute, Columbia University
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 40 MB
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About the Author

Cheehyung Harrison Kim is associate professor of history at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction: Postwar North Korea, the Era of Work
1. The Historical Concept of Work
2. Work as State Practice
3. Producing the Everyday Life of Work
4. The Rhythm of Everyday Work, in Six Parts
5. Vinalon City: Industrialism as Socialist Everyday Life
Conclusion: The Negation of Work and Other Everyday Maneuvers
Notes
Bibliography
Index

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