Introduction: Locating Asian art in the Cold War

Midori YAMAMURA, Yu Chieh LI

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Abstract

This chapter examines the ways in which the linearity of Cold War temporality is complicated by French photographer and Korean adoptee Agn's Dherbeys's photographs of Korean birth mothers and her own adoptive father; in turn, it exposes the neoliberal effects underpinning the politics of Cold War temporality. The Cold War has conventionally been viewed as the binary opposition between American-style democratic capitalism and Soviet-style communism from 1945 until the collapse of the Berlin Wall and the communist regimes of Eastern Europe in 1989. In the history of the Cold War, Asia has played a pivotal role. Among various accounts of the Cold War's beginnings, Marc Gallicchio explained in 1988 that it started with the United States East Asian policy after Japan's defeat in 1945. The present volume examines visual manifestations of the postcolonial struggles in artworks from East and Southeast Asia that were made while the world was being shaped by neoliberal political, ethical, and economic pressures.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationVisual Representations of the Cold War and Postcolonial Struggles: Art in East and Southeast Asia
EditorsMidori YAMAMURA, Yu-Chieh LI
PublisherRoutledge
Pages1-6
Number of pages6
ISBN (Electronic)9781000405859
ISBN (Print)9780367615291
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 selection and editorial matter, Midori Yamamura and Yu-Chieh Li; individual chapters, the contributors.

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