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Engineers for Korea /

By: Han, Kyonghee [author.].
Contributor(s): Downey, Gary Lee [author.].
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: Synthesis digital library of engineering and computer science: ; Synthesis lectures on global engineering: # 5.Publisher: San Rafael, California (1537 Fourth Street, San Rafael, CA 94901 USA) : Morgan & Claypool, 2014.Description: 1 PDF (xxi, 175 pages) : illustrations.Content type: text Media type: electronic Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9781627050777.Subject(s): Engineers -- Korea (South) | Engineering and state -- Korea (South) | engineers | engineering | Korea | Korean engineers | Korean engineering | engineering education | dominant images | dominant practices | national identity | gender in engineering | women in engineering | techno-national formation | scholar official | Park Chung-hee | industrialization | Korean miracle | economic competitiveness | globalization | critical participationDDC classification: 607.10519 Online resources: Abstract with links to full text | Abstract with links to resource Also available in print.
Contents:
1. What are Korean engineers for? -- What is a Korean engineer? -- Government struggles to establish sovereignty -- Koreas and engineers -- References --
2. Five Koreas without Korean engineers: 1876-1960 -- Late Joseon disinterest in physical labor: 1876-1897 -- Responding to the threat from Japan: 1897-1910 -- Low-level technicians for the Japanese empire: 1910-1945 -- No place for engineers in an agrarian vision: 1945-1948 -- Rebuilding again without engineers: 1948-1960 -- A matter of individual interest and ambition -- References --
3. Technical workers for light industry: 1961-1970 -- A program in two parts -- Technical soldiers for industrial development -- Initial attempts to scale up technical education -- Higher-level experts for exports -- Resistance in the "second economy" -- References --
4. Engineers for heavy and chemical industries: 1970-1979 -- Making heavy industry Korean -- Vocational graduates for specific industries -- Rational scientist-engineers for leadership -- Korean miracle? Continuing struggles in the second economy -- References --
5. Loss of privilege and visibility: 1980-1998 -- Rationalizing the economy -- Engineers lose the spotlight: 1980s -- Coordinated creativity? -- Competitive self-development or an organized profession? 1990s -- References --
6. Engineers for a post-catch-up Korea? -- Scaling up an image of crisis -- Uneven support from successive governments -- The continuing struggles of women engineers -- Military practice and the dominant image of engineering -- New images scaling up? -- References --
7. Engineers and Korea -- Korean engineers and the scholar-official -- Critical self-reflection and critical participation -- References --
Index -- Author biographies.
Abstract: "The engineer is bearer of the nation's industrialization," says the tower pictured on the front cover. President Park Chung-hee (1917-1979) was seeking to scale up a unified national identity through industrialization, with engineers as iconic leaders. But Park encountered huge obstacles in what he called the "second economy" of mental nationalism. Technical workers had long been subordinate to classically trained scholar officials. Even as the country became an industrial powerhouse, the makers of engineers never found approaches to techno-national formation--engineering education and training--that Koreans would wholly embrace. This book follows the fraught attempts of engineers to identify with Korea as a whole. It is for engineers, both Korean and non-Korean, who seek to become better critical analysts of their own expertise, identities, and commitments. It is for non-engineers who encounter or are affected by Korean engineers and engineering, and want to understand and engage them. It is for researchers who serve as critical participants in the making of engineers and puzzle over the contents and effects of techno-national formation.
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Item type Current location Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
E books E books PK Kelkar Library, IIT Kanpur
Available EBKE579
Total holds: 0

Mode of access: World Wide Web.

System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader.

Part of: Synthesis digital library of engineering and computer science.

Series from website.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

1. What are Korean engineers for? -- What is a Korean engineer? -- Government struggles to establish sovereignty -- Koreas and engineers -- References --

2. Five Koreas without Korean engineers: 1876-1960 -- Late Joseon disinterest in physical labor: 1876-1897 -- Responding to the threat from Japan: 1897-1910 -- Low-level technicians for the Japanese empire: 1910-1945 -- No place for engineers in an agrarian vision: 1945-1948 -- Rebuilding again without engineers: 1948-1960 -- A matter of individual interest and ambition -- References --

3. Technical workers for light industry: 1961-1970 -- A program in two parts -- Technical soldiers for industrial development -- Initial attempts to scale up technical education -- Higher-level experts for exports -- Resistance in the "second economy" -- References --

4. Engineers for heavy and chemical industries: 1970-1979 -- Making heavy industry Korean -- Vocational graduates for specific industries -- Rational scientist-engineers for leadership -- Korean miracle? Continuing struggles in the second economy -- References --

5. Loss of privilege and visibility: 1980-1998 -- Rationalizing the economy -- Engineers lose the spotlight: 1980s -- Coordinated creativity? -- Competitive self-development or an organized profession? 1990s -- References --

6. Engineers for a post-catch-up Korea? -- Scaling up an image of crisis -- Uneven support from successive governments -- The continuing struggles of women engineers -- Military practice and the dominant image of engineering -- New images scaling up? -- References --

7. Engineers and Korea -- Korean engineers and the scholar-official -- Critical self-reflection and critical participation -- References --

Index -- Author biographies.

Abstract freely available; full-text restricted to subscribers or individual document purchasers.

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"The engineer is bearer of the nation's industrialization," says the tower pictured on the front cover. President Park Chung-hee (1917-1979) was seeking to scale up a unified national identity through industrialization, with engineers as iconic leaders. But Park encountered huge obstacles in what he called the "second economy" of mental nationalism. Technical workers had long been subordinate to classically trained scholar officials. Even as the country became an industrial powerhouse, the makers of engineers never found approaches to techno-national formation--engineering education and training--that Koreans would wholly embrace. This book follows the fraught attempts of engineers to identify with Korea as a whole. It is for engineers, both Korean and non-Korean, who seek to become better critical analysts of their own expertise, identities, and commitments. It is for non-engineers who encounter or are affected by Korean engineers and engineering, and want to understand and engage them. It is for researchers who serve as critical participants in the making of engineers and puzzle over the contents and effects of techno-national formation.

Also available in print.

Title from PDF title page (viewed on July 21, 2014).

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