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Ki-Yong Nam: A Korean Marathon Runner Under Japanese Colonial Rule

Title
Ki-Yong Nam: A Korean Marathon Runner Under Japanese Colonial Rule
Author
남상백
Keywords
1940 Tokyo Olympics; Colonial sport; Ethnic identity; National identity
Issue Date
2019-05
Publisher
Human Kinetics Publishers Inc.
Citation
Kinesiology Review, v. 8, No. 2, Page. 130-139
Abstract
This article presents a biographical investigation of Ki-Yong Nam, revealing a little-known story of a Korean marathon runner who lost the opportunity to compete in the canceled 1940 Olympics under Japanese colonial rule. During the Japanese colonial and postcolonial eras, Korean marathoners produced world-class performances in elite events including the Olympic Games and Boston Marathon. Their achievements served as an inspiration to ethnic Koreans during Japanese colonial rule. Today, many Koreans remember these athletes as sport activists and heroes. However, athletes who endeavored to express Korean ethnic identity received scant attention during the war period. This article explores a significant individual whose experiences and ethnic identity were largely erased from history due to the Second Sino-Japanese War and World War II, while also illuminating his life after athletics as a coach and physical education teacher in postcolonial South Korea.
URI
https://repository.hanyang.ac.kr/handle/20.500.11754/125333https://journals.humankinetics.com/view/journals/krj/8/2/article-p130.xml
ISSN
2163-0453
DOI
10.1123/kr.2018-0066
Appears in Collections:
COLLEGE OF SPORTS AND ARTS[E](예체능대학) > ETC
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