![]() Romanization of Korean has followed the McCune-Reishauer system but some of the proper names Many thanks to my husband, Jiyul Kim, as always, for his detailed readings, astute critique, and boundless support. For their assistance, I extend my sincere thanks to Chang Ch|ng-dok, Kim Y|ng-nam, Lee Sung-kwan and Choi Young-jeep. Support for this work was provided by an American Council of Learned Societies/ Social Science Research Council postdoctoral fellowship and grants from the Korea Foundation, the Asia Research Fund, and the Daesan Foundation. But this ofï¬cial view was questioned in the An earlier and much shorter version of this essay appeared in Museum Anthropology 21, no. Ow does one commemorate a war that is technically not yet over? While the Korean War, at least for Americans, âendedâ in 1953, the discourse of commemoration about the war has not been brought to closure in Korean society.1 How does one bring closure to a war for which the central narrative is one of division and dissent, a war whose history is still in the process of being made? In South Korea, the ofï¬cial commemoration of the Korean War has always had an antiâNorth Korean character. Monumental Histories: Manliness, the Military, and the War Memorial Monumental Histories: Manliness, the Military, and the War Memorial ![]()
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