The Tapestry of Colonial Communication: Colonizing Discourses in the Seoul Press

This thesis explores the coalescence of Japanese and Anglo-American colonial discourses in the Seoul Press. Between the Protectorate Treaty of 1905 and the Annexation Treaty of 1910, Korea was dominated not only territorially but also discursively. Under the guise of the “civilizing mission,” the Ja...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Denny, Sean
Other Authors: Schmid, Andre
Language:en_ca
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/25552
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spelling ndltd-TORONTO-oai-tspace.library.utoronto.ca-1807-255522013-04-19T20:01:12ZThe Tapestry of Colonial Communication: Colonizing Discourses in the Seoul PressDenny, SeanColonialismKoreaDiscourseSeoul Press0332This thesis explores the coalescence of Japanese and Anglo-American colonial discourses in the Seoul Press. Between the Protectorate Treaty of 1905 and the Annexation Treaty of 1910, Korea was dominated not only territorially but also discursively. Under the guise of the “civilizing mission,” the Japanese Residency General sought to legitimize its colonial project in Korea. To accomplish its goals of silencing foreign opposition to Japanese colonialism and of dictating international opinion about Korea, the Residency General established an English language newspaper, the Seoul Press. In the pages of this daily paper, the views of Japanese colonial officials as well as Anglo-American observers found expression. Through an analysis of articles from the Seoul Press, this thesis will reveal the existence of a dual-layered gaze of colonialism, the rhetorical threads of which made up the tapestry of colonial communication.Schmid, Andre2010-112010-12-31T18:37:05ZNO_RESTRICTION2010-12-31T18:37:05Z2010-12-31T18:37:05ZThesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/25552en_ca
collection NDLTD
language en_ca
sources NDLTD
topic Colonialism
Korea
Discourse
Seoul Press
0332
spellingShingle Colonialism
Korea
Discourse
Seoul Press
0332
Denny, Sean
The Tapestry of Colonial Communication: Colonizing Discourses in the Seoul Press
description This thesis explores the coalescence of Japanese and Anglo-American colonial discourses in the Seoul Press. Between the Protectorate Treaty of 1905 and the Annexation Treaty of 1910, Korea was dominated not only territorially but also discursively. Under the guise of the “civilizing mission,” the Japanese Residency General sought to legitimize its colonial project in Korea. To accomplish its goals of silencing foreign opposition to Japanese colonialism and of dictating international opinion about Korea, the Residency General established an English language newspaper, the Seoul Press. In the pages of this daily paper, the views of Japanese colonial officials as well as Anglo-American observers found expression. Through an analysis of articles from the Seoul Press, this thesis will reveal the existence of a dual-layered gaze of colonialism, the rhetorical threads of which made up the tapestry of colonial communication.
author2 Schmid, Andre
author_facet Schmid, Andre
Denny, Sean
author Denny, Sean
author_sort Denny, Sean
title The Tapestry of Colonial Communication: Colonizing Discourses in the Seoul Press
title_short The Tapestry of Colonial Communication: Colonizing Discourses in the Seoul Press
title_full The Tapestry of Colonial Communication: Colonizing Discourses in the Seoul Press
title_fullStr The Tapestry of Colonial Communication: Colonizing Discourses in the Seoul Press
title_full_unstemmed The Tapestry of Colonial Communication: Colonizing Discourses in the Seoul Press
title_sort tapestry of colonial communication: colonizing discourses in the seoul press
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/25552
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