Skip to main content

Island Ablaze and Other Stories: The US Empire in North and South Korean Literatures

Book cover. Photo above title band: An American soldier observes a Korean family crossing the 38th parallel. Photo below: US soldiers saluting US flag in front of Korean building.

Author: Ruth Barraclough, Jae-Yong Kim, Jin-kyung Lee, and Sang-Kyung Lee, eds.

Island Ablaze and Other Stories is an anthology of thirteen stories—eleven from South Korea and two from North Korea—about these countries' complicated relationships with their most important ally and enemy: the United States. Set in times ranging from colonial Korea to the new millennium, these stories offer a look into the many ways that the US empire shapes the lives of Koreans.

In "Dawn," schoolgirl sweethearts living under Japanese colonial rule reconnect as young mothers amid celebrations of the attack on Pearl Harbor. "Till We Meet Again" addresses the adoption industry and America's treatment of Korean children following the Korean War. In the title story, a North Korean radio operator must choose between abandoning the soldier she loves or dying with him at the famous Battle of Incheon that turned the tide of the Korean War. From camp towns to sugarcane fields, missionary schools to international flights, Island Ablaze and Other Stories shows everyday Korean life in the shadow of the American empire.

Book

37.95

Additional Information

Program

Type

  • Book

  • Cornell East Asia Series

Publication Details

Publication Year: 2025

Publication Number: 225

ISBN: 9781501782220