"People like You and Me": The Korean War, Humanitarian Aid, and Creating Compassion

IF 0.7 3区 社会学 0 ASIAN STUDIES
Paulette Cha
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Abstract:During the 1950s a number of private and voluntary aid organizations (PVOs) in the United States mobilized to address the humanitarian crisis caused by the Korean War. However, the activities and roles PVOs played in both providing humanitarian relief in South Korea and shaping American perceptions of the country are poorly understood. This article examines the strategies PVOs employed in their campaigns to convince Americans to contribute aid. The existence of need was a necessary but not sufficient condition. As scholars of humanitarian aid have argued, potential donors might view images of suffering with pity and sympathy but then quickly turn away. Donors must feel a sense of solidarity to move beyond sympathy and act in compassion. This work demonstrates that PVOs tried to create narratives of commonality between Americans and South Koreans. However, a reliance on images of poverty—which were critical to raise money—conflicted with the message that South Koreans were, like Americans, independent and hardworking people. The aid groups'strategic attempts to mitigate this dissonance by focusing on the supposedly weak (elderly, women, children, and amputees) had the unintended consequence of casting South Korea as an emasculated nation needing to be "saved."
《像你我一样的人》:朝鲜战争、人道主义援助和创造同情心
摘要:在20世纪50年代,美国的一些私人和志愿援助组织(PVOs)动员起来应对朝鲜战争造成的人道主义危机。然而,志愿军在向韩国提供人道主义援助和塑造美国对韩国的看法方面所发挥的作用和作用却鲜为人知。本文考察了公益组织在说服美国人提供援助的活动中采用的策略。需要的存在是必要条件,但不是充分条件。正如研究人道主义援助的学者所指出的那样,潜在的捐助者可能会怀着怜悯和同情看待苦难的图像,但很快就会转身离开。捐助者必须有一种团结感,才能超越同情,采取同情行动。这项工作表明,PVOs试图创造美国人和韩国人之间的共性叙事。然而,对贫困形象的依赖——这对筹集资金至关重要——与韩国人像美国人一样是独立和勤劳的人的信息相冲突。援助组织通过关注所谓的弱者(老人、妇女、儿童和截肢者)来缓解这种不和谐的战略尝试,产生了意想不到的后果,将韩国塑造成一个需要“拯救”的阉割国家。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
23
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