World History
Related: About this forumAmerican Military Government in Korea by E. Grant Meade
This is a valuable historical resource about the experience of the American Military Government in South Korea by E. Grant Meade.
The book covers the years 1945 and 1946 after the liberation of Korea from the Japanese occupation at the end of WWII. It appears the book was completed in 1950 and published in 1951. US foreign policy objectives, international relations between the US and Russia, and US military civil administration are described against the backdrop of the actual conditions on the ground in Korea at the time. The author focuses in particular on the US military administration of Chollanamdo (province) to give detailed insights into the challenges and pitfalls of civil administration by US military personnel.
The book achieves something that other historical accounts of the US experience in Korea often try to achieve but fail, giving the reader a sense for the conditions in Korea as described by a thoughtful American during this critical formative stage of South Korea as a truncated state. One downside of the book is the limited chronological window. So i'm posting it here as a resource. Someone who might be going to live or work in South Korea might find some of the factual information and insights the author has collected in remarkable detail helpful. On the other hand, some of the cultural, historical, and policy views of the author or US authorities may appear dated, superficial, or simply ethnocentric, because of the limited American understanding of the Korean experience in 1950. The book needs to be viewed in that historical context. Both the Korean political situation and the US have changed a great deal since. For it's vintage, this book is a remarkable record.
The book is available free online at the link below. This is from the foreword by Robert T. Oliver:
https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.32106000478245&view=1up&seq=7
FM123
(10,126 posts)My dad served overseas in the far east when he was in the army back then, I will be sure to share this article with him.
soryang
(3,306 posts)...I am amazed at the author's powers of observation. There is a fog like quality to being stationed in a foreign culture that is so different, yet he observed so much.
Haven't finished the book yet.