- 영문명
- "Madame Freedom" Meets Blanche DuBois: Post-war Identity of Korean Women and Reception of American Drama in the 1950s
- 발행기관
- 한국아메리카학회
- 저자명
- 최성희(Sung Hee Choi)
- 간행물 정보
- 『미국학논집』제37집 3호, 191~216쪽, 전체 26쪽
- 주제분류
- 인문학 > 기타인문학
- 파일형태
- 발행일자
- 2005.12.01

국문 초록
영문 초록
In the public/academic discourse on Americanization and modernization of Korea, which is dominated by male-centered socio-political metanarratives, women"s experience has been largely ignored or marginalized. Questioning the "dominant reading" that posits women"s Americanization as victim"s history or negative side effect of modernization, this paper attempts to show how Korean women in the 1950s encountered, experienced, and translated American culture "differently" from nationalist male elites, and thereby call attention to "plurality" of Americanization in Korea.
The study first discusses the crucial impact of American materialism and liberal ideas on the Korean women in the post-war era, and how the "Madame Freedom" syndrome/controversy, which was ignited by the hit novel/movie of the same title, epitomized the dilemma between nationalism and feminism, and ultimately the aporia of modernity. Then the paper, focusing on the case of Korean premiere of A Streetcar Named Desire in 1955, analyzes how American drama with its subtle position between high culture and popular culture, literature and entertainment, was received and viewed by women spectators and theatre artists who desperately looked for a new model in the American culture. Women spectators in the 1950s aspired to get beyond oppressive patriarchal nationalism and tried to form a new subjectivity through identifying with American(or Americanized) women in the popular culture, but at the same time, as viewed in the case of A Streetcar Named Desire, they could recognize the common fate as a "gendered other" and develop a sense of solidarity with other women beyond national borders. In that sense, literary and cultural translations of American drama helped Korean women to see themselves in a larger context of the world.
The study first discusses the crucial impact of American materialism and liberal ideas on the Korean women in the post-war era, and how the "Madame Freedom" syndrome/controversy, which was ignited by the hit novel/movie of the same title, epitomized the dilemma between nationalism and feminism, and ultimately the aporia of modernity. Then the paper, focusing on the case of Korean premiere of A Streetcar Named Desire in 1955, analyzes how American drama with its subtle position between high culture and popular culture, literature and entertainment, was received and viewed by women spectators and theatre artists who desperately looked for a new model in the American culture. Women spectators in the 1950s aspired to get beyond oppressive patriarchal nationalism and tried to form a new subjectivity through identifying with American(or Americanized) women in the popular culture, but at the same time, as viewed in the case of A Streetcar Named Desire, they could recognize the common fate as a "gendered other" and develop a sense of solidarity with other women beyond national borders. In that sense, literary and cultural translations of American drama helped Korean women to see themselves in a larger context of the world.
목차
Ⅰ. 서론
Ⅱ. 해방공간: 미국화와 자유부인의 등장
Ⅲ. 『욕망이라는 이름의 전차』를 타고
Ⅳ. 만남, 그 이후: (탈)미국화와 미국문학
인용 문헌
Abstract
Ⅱ. 해방공간: 미국화와 자유부인의 등장
Ⅲ. 『욕망이라는 이름의 전차』를 타고
Ⅳ. 만남, 그 이후: (탈)미국화와 미국문학
인용 문헌
Abstract
키워드
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