Fractured Liberation

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anticommunism in south korea
asian american studies
asian spring korea
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authoritarianism in korea
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christian socialists korea
cold war in asia
decolonization of korea
democracy movement in korea
division of korea north south
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forthcoming
history of us empire
japanese colonial rule korea
korean independence movement
korean peninsula history
korean studies book
leftist activism korea
liberation of korea 1945
new deal liberals abroad
pacific history
peasant land reform korea
postwar korea history
rutgers historian
trade unions in korea
u.s. military government in korea
us foreign policy in korea
us occupation of korea 1945
women's rights in korea history
workers movements korea 1940s

Product details

  • ISBN 9780674306035
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Oct 2026
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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A poignant return to Korea’s forgotten “Asian Spring”—a moment ripe with possibility denied by the postwar US military occupation.

When Japanese imperial rule ended in August 1945, the Korean peninsula erupted with hopes of freedom, independence, and equality. Workers threw themselves into union activism and took control of factories. Peasants occupied formerly Japanese-owned farmlands, and women demanded a level playing field, politically and economically.

A Fractured Liberation brings to vivid life the brief but intense moment in postwar Korea when anything seemed possible, but nothing was guaranteed. The country had been abruptly split into US and Soviet military occupation zones, but, as Kornel Chang shows, activists sought self-governance throughout a unified Korea. These mostly left-leaning efforts were bolstered by American supporters, including New Deal liberals, Christian socialists, and trade unionists.

The Koreans’ greatest obstacle, however, proved to be the rigidly anti-communist US military government in the south, which curbed protests and muzzled reformers. As concern over the Cold War’s superpower rivalry overshadowed local democratic aspirations, the United States narrowed the possibilities for Korean independence, helping to cement the North-South divide and ensure decades of authoritarian rule on both sides.

Kornel Chang is the author of Pacific Connections: The Making of the U.S.-Canadian Borderlands, winner of the Association for Asian American Studies Book Prize in History. He is Professor of History and American Studies and Chair of the History Department at Rutgers University–Newark.

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