Quiet diplomacy in a television era: The media and U.S. policy toward the republic of Korea |
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Authors: | James F. Larson |
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Affiliation: | School of Communications DS‐40 , University of Washington , Seattle, WA, 98195 |
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Abstract: | This study examines the role of television coverage in U.S. policy toward South Korea, focusing on the May 1980 Kwangji incident and the subsequent visit of South Korean president Chun Doo Hwan to the White House in February of 1981. It explores these two episodes in the context of major dimensions of U.S. policy toward Korea and the themes developed through sporadic, low‐level coverage of Korea by mainstream American media over the years. The analysis underscores the political impact of television's dramatic visual focus, its use of consistent visual images, its expansion of the geopolitical scope of the policy process, and its personalization of policy. The dramatically different public interpretations of the Kwangju incident and Chun visit in Korea versus the United States suggests that President Reagan's first major state visit, during which he declared that his administration would pursue “quiet diplomacy” on human rights in Korea, while successful within the United States and in the short term, was damaging over the long term. |
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Keywords: | News media television foreign policy public opinion diplomacy Korea United States |
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