Friday 6 March 2009

Beyond the colonial us and them

Straits of Chosun, directed by Park Ki-Chae

Straits of Chosun was shown as part of a series of Korean occupation films at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City last month. The event, sparsely attended as it was, offered a compelling glimpse of an earlier moment in the history of cultural globalisation. Straits of Chosun, while perhaps less impressive than contemporary examples of frenetic, hybrid, global culture, stands out as an interesting artifact of history. The familiar romantic plot, the conflicts between filial loyalty and movements of the heart, and the subtle war story all belie a smoother history of globalisation than is instantiated by the film itself.

Western film tropes, and music, Japanese language, Korean familial content are put together to construct a strangely mature piece of work; mature in the way that these normally unrelated elements are smoothly integrated. It is easy to see culture as a natural flowering of different necessary historical conditions. That is, to think the historical causality of culture formation is somehow a total necessity of that place’s development. Straits of Chosun does not visually embody all of the historical conflicts taking place around its production, and in fact seems to represent some later period of Korean internationalism, and globalisation. The film disguises a more violent path to the global, and stands in contrast to the idea that cultures are merely extensions of a people in a place.

Made during the final two years of the Second World War, Straits of Chosun is a refined propagandist film; by smoothly incorporating the familiarly American melodramatic romance model into the story of one man’s military enrolment, the Korean production team behind this film created a convincing, and implicit Japanese propaganda piece. Having fallen from honour by ignoring his parent’s demand to let go of his love for a woman of lower social status, the young male protagonist seeks redemption through military service. He trains with the Japanese imperial army, and is eventually sent off to fight. The characters sudden decision to join up with the military is integrated so precisely into the plot of the film that the propaganda element (at least to the English speaking viewer) is almost undetectable.

Certain historical conditions can shed light on the more subtle glorification of the war effort, and purification by service that lie beneath the surface. Firstly, this film is a product of a Korean film production company operating within a colonial satellite. While this does not explicitly mean that any depiction of military enlistment is actually a ploy by the coloniser to drum-up false support for a war fought by invaders, and foreigners, the colonial context in which the movie is made, at least, must be noted. In some circumstances (perhaps even those involving the reclaiming of lost honour) the choice of army service would in fact offer the redemptive power necessary to heal a divided family.

Within any complex colonial situation there are always multiple layers of allegiance amongst the colonised eg. the compradore bourgeoisie in China, Iran, and elsewhere, or Loyalists in British colonial America. It is a false dichotomy to view the activities of the coloniser as always, at the outset, malevolent acts of oppression, or to present the interests of the coloniser (in this case Japan), and the colonised (Korea) as inherently at odds. Clearly this situation is a familiar one and speaks truth to many of the world’s colonial contexts. In thinking about the cultures we have inherited from former empires we must take into account both the fact that colonial culture is never constructed entirely on the basis of a political ‘us versus them’. Rather, colonial culture necessarily gleans from all involved parties; colonial culture is a product of all parties in the colonial situation, not always engaged in outright conflict.

Of course, Straits of Chosun is a film record from 1943, the height of World War Two, and the middle of the theatre in the Pacific. The Japanese need to fill their ranks would have been as pertinent as ever. A production company making films in Korea at this time would have had the incentive (perhaps offered in the form of funding, and/or distribution) to make a final product that was in some way cohesive with the war effort. To many students of geography, or world history this may seem, at first, a sign of complacency. The willingness of the Korean production company to manufacture and distribute a film which tacitly condones, and encourages Korean participation in the Japanese struggle in world war seems a sort of bizarre betrayal of ‘homegrown’ Korean culture and society.

In the introductory essay to the book Colonial Modernity in Korea, editor Gi-Wook Shin introduces a new theoretical structure for the analysis of twentieth-century history in Korea. Shin claims that culture and society during this time were structured by three influences: nationalism, colonialism, and modernity. Between these three ideological frameworks, Korea built its sense of self. This seems to hold up in Straits of Chosun for a number of reasons. The Japanese colonial project across the pacific consisted, in part, of assimilating colonised peoples into a greater Japanese ‘nationalist’ programme.

Peoples, and geographies subjugated by the Japanese colonial project were offered national inclusion by their invaders; in exchange for coerced allegiance, residents of Japanese colonial territory would be granted citizen-status in the Empire. On a practical level the benefits of such an offering may seem slim. Among limited other opportunities accorded to citizens, colonised peoples could engage in, and enlist for military service. The thrust of Shin’s argument is simple—by forcing the relationship between coloniser, and colonised into an dichotomy the possibilities of identity (and in fact, history) are diminished. The dichotomous view of coloniser-colonised would encourage the idea that if one is born in the geographical space of Korea, unless he or she is a traitor, they will oppose colonisation, and resist it. Shin’s theory is useful in analysing Straits of Chosun if only because it seems to hold true for the events that occur in the plot. That is, the protagonist has multiple affiliations and loyalties – not the least of which is his family - including a belief, if uncritical, in the ability of the Japanese military to offer him sorely needed opportunity in his life.

 


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Resources

The Times BFI 53rd London Film Festival

Internet Movie Database
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ICA Film
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National Media Museum
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