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Called by Another Name

A Memoir of the Gwangju Uprising

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The American who walked into the turmoil of Korean history


After graduating from university, David wanted to make a positive change in the world. He joined the Peace Corps and arrived in South Korea in 1978. He was bestowed with a Korean name, Im Dae-oon and it was his name throughout his time in Korea. He was assigned to serve as a tuberculosis worker in Yeongam, a town in Korea's southwest. He came to fall in love with the country's food,scenery, and people.


On May 18, 1980, David arrived in Gwangju to transfer buses to his home,Yeongam. Tim Warnberg, his friend and fellow Peace Corps Volunteer, told him that there was brutal violence against any young people seen in the streets. He came back home but he continued to hear that the violence was getting worse and the phone lines to Gwangju had been cut.David set out for the city to check on Tim and his Korean friends.


What is the Gwangju Uprising?


The 1980 Gwangju Uprising was a people's uprising by the citizens of Gwangju in response to the brutal and harsh suppression of student protests carried out by the Korean military after their leaders declared martial law and took over the country. It began on May 18 and ended the early morning of May 27, 1980. It began in Gwangju, the capital of South Jeolla province, but also expanded beyond the city to involve the southern half of the province. It is the most inspiring and heartbreaking event in South Korea's modern history.


Inside the book


"How did I get here? I asked myself that question many times during the events of May 1980. I had asked it on May 16 as I listened to plans for the student-led torchlight march that night, I asked it on May 21 as I walked into the city, I asked it that early morning on May 25, and I will probably ask it until the end of my life. I never realized where it would all take me, or how it would all fit into a journey of a lifetime."


-From the Preface-


"There was a finality to this day unlike any of the other days I had spent in the Provincial Capital. Running through my mind were worries about the final outcome, and how high the death toll might be. I could not figure out how I would be able to cope with it all. How do you deal with the possibility of a large number of people you know all dying in a short period of time?"


-From Funerals and farewells


*Watch the authors' interviews

https://www.goggasworld.com/calledbyanothername

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 6, 2023
      This vivid and moving memoir, Dolinger’s debut, recounts a harrowing encounter with history. Dolinger traveled to Korea in the late 1970s as a Peace Corps volunteer set to treat Tuberculosis in the rural outskirts of the city of Gwangju. Falling in love with the nation and its people, and finding that Buddhist teachings connected in edifying ways to his Quaker upbringing, Dolinger immersed himself in Korean culture, and was given the name Im Dae-oon, which he came to identify with more than “David.” He reports being especially fascinated by an ethos of personal sacrifice to the benefit of others, a belief he witnessed firsthand when the nation’s bleak political landscape at the time took a turn for the worse, and the politically progressive youth of Gwangju, who gathered in protest against martial law and the coup-installed leadership of Chun Doo-hwan, were attacked by the military, resulting in hundreds—if not thousands—of deaths. Dolinger chillingly reports seeing over 100 coffins in a gymnasium at the provincial capital.
      Dolinger, with co-author Matt VanVolkenburg, writes that he has set out to honor those killed in the Gwangju Uprising of May, 1980, and their stories come through here with clarity and power. Also clear is the political, cultural, and economic currents, plus the responsibility that Dolinger feels to report what he witnessed—and to give voice to others, especially in light of the disinterest of western journalists.
      As a Peace Corps volunteer, Dolinger was ordered to stand down and get out of the city, but his own values simply wouldn’t allow him to do so. Instead, he observed, took photographs (included here), and helped as many citizens as he could as the violence carried on. Now, he works to ensure that the facts are known. Part fast-paced and fascinating memoir, with wrenching accounts of “terror … being rained down from the skies,” and part documentary memorial for the people of Gwangju, Called by Another Name exposes the shocking truth.
      Takeaway: Gripping firsthand account of South Korea’s Gwangju Uprising and massacre.
      Comparable Titles: Hwang Sok-yong, Lee Jae-Eui, and Jeon Yong-Ho’s Gwangju Uprising, Choi Jungwoon’s The Gwangju Uprising.
      Production grades
      Cover: A
      Design and typography: A
      Illustrations: A
      Editing: A
      Marketing copy: A

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