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논문 기본 정보

자료유형
학술저널
저자정보
박주현 (가톨릭대학교)
저널정보
한국근대영미소설학회 근대영미소설 근대영미소설 제31권 제1호
발행연도
2024.4
수록면
87 - 121 (35page)

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Agnes Herbert’s 1924 novel, A Girl’s Adventure in Korea, features a British youth called Anemone Napier exploring colonial Korea. As the first Western novel set in Korea under Japanese rule, it reflects Britain’s political interests in Northeast Asia, especially the imperial entanglements in the region that involved the new and old Asian empires, that is, China and Japan. Herbert blends the “off-the-beaten-path” travelogue genre and the “yellow peril” Asian invasion novel genre, which in effect allows her to obscure Korean anti-colonial resistance and avoid discussing the violent implications of colonization. The recycled tropes of Korean backwardness Anemone uses in her rural observations rationalize Japanese rule and put a positive light on Japanese rule as a means to progress. The villain of the “Yellow Peril” plotline, Yuan-ti, diverts focus from Japanese oppression to a menacing Chinese force threatening regional order and British virtue. The Yuan-ti storyline also allows Herbert to de-emphasize the contentious history of Japanese-Korean relations by showing how Anemone, her Korean staff, Japanese administrators and soldiers collaborate in Anemone’s escape and reestablish peace in Korea. Through encounters with these varied Asians she meets off the beaten path, Anemone learns to hierarchize the distinct “Orientals” and manage them accordingly. And such experiences mature her into a proper female imperial subject capable of imposing order, taming foreign staff, and bringing an ideal foreign staff into her society.

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