This paper explores how the Korean images formed during the colonial Korea were reconstructed in the joint struggle by the Japanese Communist Party and Koreans in Japan for their independence from USA, linked to the international communist movement. The both groups who had been in charge of the struggle and also who had been shut up forcibly and exploited before World War Ⅱ promoted the post-war/postliberation social movements, raising their voices. Thus their joint struggles has been represented by the interchange by the voices. Koreans in Japan who interchanged in Japanese were recognized as a node of the East Asian revolution to symbolize the transnational solidarity between Korea and Japan, not the minority in the Japanese society. Focusing on the movement of re-nationalizing Japanese history, utagoe movement and other popular cultures developed by both of them in 1945 to 1955, this study offers a schematic outline on the process of replacing conventional Korean images represented by historical perspective of colonization with ones of national resistance by writing down the voices of the subaltern of Koreans in Japan.
1. 석방된 자, 해방된 자 2. 분출하는 피억압자들의 목소리 3. 목소리를 듣다: 조선민족의 저항이라는 오럴 히스토리 4. 목소리를 기록하다: 국민적 역사학 운동의 외연 5. 함께 노래하고 함께 싸우고: 우타고에 운동 6. 좌절된 합창, 포기된 혁명 reference abstract abstract
키워드
재일조선인일본공산당국민적 역사학 운동우타고에 운동피억압자의 목소리Koreans in JapanJapanese Communist Partymovement of re-nationalizing Japanese historyUtagoe movementvoice of the subaltern在日朝鮮人日本共産党国民的歴史学運動うたごえ運動被抑圧者たちの声