6.25 Korean War

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6.25 Korean War by Mind Map: 6.25 Korean War

1. Citation

1.1. one author from our course readings

1.1.1. Hideko Tamura

1.2. Two primary sources

1.2.1. Sang-hun, Choe. “In South Korea, Spam Is the Stuff Gifts Are Made Of.” The New York Times, The New York Times, 27 Jan. 2014, www.nytimes.com/2014/01/27/world/asia/in-south-korea-spam-is-the-stuff-gifts-are-made-of.html.

1.2.2. Magazine, Contexts. “Eating Military Base Stew.” Contexts, 24 Aug. 2014, contexts.org/articles/eating-military-base-stew/.

1.3. six secondary sources

1.3.1. BBCnews. “Korean Reunions: Families Divided by War Meet in North.” BBC News, BBC, 20 Aug. 2018, www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-45243108.

1.3.2. Blakemore, Erin. “How Japan Took Control of Korea.” History.com, A&E Television Networks, 28 Feb. 2018, www.history.com/news/japan-colonization-korea.

1.3.3. Lehnardt, Karin. “62 Interesting Facts about the Korean War.” Interesting Facts, Fact Retriever, 15 Aug. 2019, www.factretriever.com/korean-war-facts.

1.3.4. Millett, Allan R. “Korean War.” Encyclopædia Britannica, Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc., 30 Jan. 2020, www.britannica.com/event/Korean-War.

1.3.5. Sang-soon, Shin. “The Korean War (6.25): How It Began.” Gwangju News Online, 24 May 2019, gwangjunewsgic.com/features/jeolla-history/the-korean-war/.

2. What did I found?

2.1. Army Stew

2.1.1. The stew made by leftover food

2.1.2. This food was not delicious at first, because of various residues mixed with inedible things like cigarette butts (Magazine, 2014.)

2.1.3. Their food was sometimes disgusting, but I thought it kept the food alive (Magazine, 2014.)

2.1.4. people say, "Americans eat the best food and throw it away, and Koreans buy it." (Magazine, 2014.)

2.1.5. And this food becomes to budaejjigae.

2.2. Luxury spam gift set

2.2.1. American: thinks the spam as the gelatinous meat product in the familiar blue and yellow cans (Sang-hun, Choe., 2014.)

2.2.2. In south Korea: The spam is a classy gift you can give to people you care about during the holiday (Sang-hun, Choe., 2014.)

2.2.3. During the Korean War, the spam PX food was the only way they could get meat (Sang-hun, Choe., 2014.)

2.2.4. It reflects the hardship of the Korean war that silver age people faced.

3. What is my Future Plan?

3.1. Prove this is not the meaningless step

3.1.1. Economic affects

3.1.1.1. Leading COIVD-19 kit developing

3.1.1.2. Samsung, LG

3.1.2. interview from the USA army

3.1.3. Social impacts from Korea

3.2. Questions

3.2.1. Has war ever worked well in human history?

3.2.2. Why did the North suddenly invade South Korea?

3.2.3. Is there any regret for the US military's participation in the Korean War?

3.2.4. How other country can survive from the war?

3.2.4.1. It was possible to find the answer from the course reading. (Hideko Tamura)

3.2.4.1.1. Describing how he survived when the nuclear bomb hits Japan.

4. What is it?

4.1. After Korea becomes to free from Japanese's control (Blakemore, 2019.) The war between North Korea and South Korea

4.2. On the morning of June 25, 1950, Seoul was occupied by North Korean troops (Sang-soon, 2019.)

4.3. The United Nations forces, with 16 countries around the United States, began supporting South Korea (Sang-soon, 2019.)

4.4. On July 27, 1953. Korea divided into South and North based on the 38th (Sang-soon, 2019.)

5. What is the objective?

5.1. Today we easily can discover the Korean war through

5.1.1. Wikipedia

5.1.2. Books

5.1.3. Web News

5.1.4. Movie and YouTube

5.2. The main objective of this is describing the suffering of the Korean people’s lives.

5.2.1. Foods

5.2.2. cultures

5.3. Interview of Korean war solider from the U.S.A

5.4. Prove 6.25 Korean War is not a meaningless step in history.

6. What happened?

6.1. There are people who have left their families in North Korea (BBCnews, 2018.)

6.2. A lot of American culture influenced to South Korea (Millett, 2020.)

6.3. From this suffering many new cultures created that we still facing currently.