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Title: Anarchism in Korea
Date: 2009
Source: *The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest*, Edited by Immanuel Ness. DOI: 10.1002/9781405198073.wbierp0063
Authors: Dongyoun Hwang
Topics: history, anarchist history, Korea
Published: 2020-05-10 06:58:51Z

Anarchism, accepted by Korean radicals in

the early 1920s as an idea for independence

from Japanese colonial rule since 1910, was

one of the most important currents in the

Korean independence movement. While their

immediate goal was to “retake” independence

through direct action, motivated by national

consciousness, the ultimate goal of Korean

anarchists was to achieve a social revolution

bent on anarchist principles. Anarchism

offered them an alternative to Bolshevism

and social Darwinism with its promise of

human progress through mutual aid, and

hope for a new society with its universal

messages of freedom, no compulsory power,

and spontaneous alliance.

The circulations of anarchist ideas as well

as anarchists themselves in East Asia were of

significance in the rise of Korean anarchism

in the 1920s, in the sense that it was basically

a product of interactions among anarchists

in the area, through which Korean anarchists

were imbued with national consciousness

and shared transnational concerns with other

anarchists as a result of mutual influence and

inspiration. Transnationalism, like nationalism, was a main force in the rise of Korean

anarchism, which may explain why Korean

anarchists preferred political independence

to social revolution, without which, they

believed, no significant political changes

could even be made (Hwang 2007).

After 1920 anarchist groups and organizations appeared first among Korean exiles

and/or study-abroad students in China and

Japan, and then in Korea. In early 1920s

China the Beijing Branch of the Black Youth

Alliance and the Korean Anarchist Federation in China were successively established.

The inaugural editorial of the latter’s organ,

clearly expressed its advocacy of social revolution for “the oppressed class,” while Shin

Chaeho’s 1923 “Declaration of the Korean

Revolution” justified mass violence against

Japanese colonial government (Graham 2005:

373–6, 381–3). Of importance in the Korean

reception of anarchism was support from

Chinese anarchists and the role of Vasilij

Eroshenko, a blind Russian poet and anarchist, who propagated in early 1920s China

cosmopolitanism and anti-Bolshevism (Bak

2005: 26; Hwang 2007). Many Korean anarchists participated in such anarchist projects

as the opening of the National Shanghai

Labor University (1928), the Movement for

Self-Defensive Rural Communities (1927–8)

in Quanzhou, and educational experiments

(1929–early 1930s) also in Quanzhou. After

1931 many engaged in armed struggles

against Japan, in collaboration with some

Chinese anarchists. Their goal, however, was

still social revolution rather than political

independence, as exemplified in the platform

and declaration of the Alliance of Korean

Youths in South China (Bak 2005: 161–8).

In Japan the first anarchism-oriented Black

Wave Society appeared in 1921, but a group

of Korean anarchists withdrew from it to

establish the Black Friend Society and published *Fat Korean* (*Hutoi senjin*). Park Yeol

was a leading figure in the organizations and

journal until 1923, when he and his Japanese

comrade Kaneko Fumiko were arrested

for their alleged conspiracy to assassinate

the Japanese emperor. *Fat Korean* and its

successor, *The Contemporary Society* (*Gen shakai*), both published in 1923, made clear

their national and transnational goals under

the shackles of capitalism and colonialism

(Hwang 2007). Park’s arrest was a setback

to the Japan-based Korean anarchist movement which was revived briefly with the

organization in 1926 of the Black Movement

Society, which became a member of the

Japanese Black Youth League. Obviously,

many Japan-based Korean anarchists partook

in the various publications and organizational

activities of their Japanese counterparts,

which was conducive to their survival under

Japanese surveillance. Their activities used to

be supported and even sponsored by Japanese

anarchists such as Ōsugi Sakae, Hatta Shūzō,

and Iwasa SakutarĹŤ.

The Korean anarchist groups in Japan

manifested their criticism of capitalism,

colonialism, and the nationalist movement,

and made poignant attacks on Bolsheviks as

a “new privileged class.” Their movement,

however, began to decline after 1930 due to

tight control of “dangerous thoughts” in Japan

after its invasion of China. One exception

to this was the *Black Newspaper* (*Heuksaek sinmun*), published from 1930 until 1935 with

funding from Korean anarchist unions and

organizations in Japan, which interspersed

a wide range of local, national, and global

news of anarchist activities and propagated

social revolution, cosmopolitan ideas, and

intense interactions among all anarchists and

the masses across boundaries, along with

criticism of nationalism and patriotism in the

independence camps (Hwang 2007).

The ups and downs of the anarchist

movement in Korea were closely tied to the

situation of Korean anarchists in Japan and

China. Any attempts to set up an anarchist

organization in Korea, however, always met

with swift and brutal suppression from the

Japanese colonial government. Attempts to

establish the Black Flag Federation (1924),

the Real Friend Federation (1925), and Choi

Gabryong’s scheme to establish the Korean

Anarcho-Communist Federation (1929)

were all immediately crushed. Nevertheless,

various anarchist groups and organizations

continued to appear until the mid-1930s,

albeit all short-lived. In the 1930s and 1940s

anarchists in Korea were either arrested or

forced underground to survive. Similar to

their counterparts in China and Japan, their

goal was not so much Korea’s independence

as the realization of an anarchism-oriented

society (Mujeongbu jueui undongsa pyeonchan wiweonhoi 1989: 189–274, 394–400).

In the 1930s the Korean anarchist movement began to be at the ebb both at home and

abroad, from which it never recovered. The

notion and idea of social revolution, however,

was sustained at least until 1945, coexisting

with its national goal of independence (Yi

1974: 11). It is in this sense that anarchism in

Korea was accepted not just to be “utilized”

only for independence, but rather with reference to a society free of the “social problems”

prevalent under capitalism. Anarchism still

seems alive in South Korea as an idea for “freedom for the twenty-first century” (Bak 1999).

References and Suggested Readings

<biblio>

Bak, H. (2005) Sikminji sidae hanin anakijeum

undoongsa [A History of Korean Anarchism During the Colonial Period]. Seoul: Seonin.

Bak, Y. (1999) 21segi jayu, anakijeum! [Anarchism!

Freedom for the Twenty-First Century]. Hankoreh21 279 (October 21). Available at http://www.hani.co.kr/h21/data/L991011/1paqab02.

html (downloaded October 21, 1999).

Graham, R., (Ed.) (2005) Anarchism: A Documentary History of Libertarian Ideas. Vol. 1: From

Anarchy to Anarchism (300 CE to 1939). Montreal: Black Rose Books.

Hwang, D. (2007) Beyond Independence: The

Korean Anarchist Press in China and Japan in

the 1920s–1930s. Asian Studies Review 31, 1

(March): 3–23.

Mujeongbu jueui undongsa pyeonchan wiweonhoi (Ed.) (1989) Han’guk anakijeum undongsa

[A History of the Korean Anarchist Movement].

Seoul: Hyeongseol Chulpansa.

Oh, J. (1998) Han’guk anakijeum undongsa [A History of the Korean Anarchist Movement]. Seoul:

Gukak jaryoweon.

Yi, C. (1974) Ugwan munjon [Collected Works of Li

Chung-kyu]. Seoul: Samhwa insoe.

Yi, H. (2001) Hanguk eui anakijeum – sasang

pyeon [Anarchism in Korea: Its Ideas]. Seoul:

Jisik saneobsa.

</biblio>

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