Drinking culture in Korea
Koreans, like their neighbours across the water in Japan, like a drink and a good time. TheJapanese consume 70 litres of beer per person compared with 40 litres per capita in South Korea. Drinking has always enabled Koreans to cut loose from the rather stiff constraints of their hierarchical Confucian culture and a few drinks and a singalong are a big part of modern Ko
the focus of attention. As the largest, best tourist resort in Asia to develop, Walkerhill construction office is installed on the 25th of August 1961. The same year on December 22, launched as the two shrines Walkerhill corporation on January 5 next year saw the start of construction.
In order to express the gratitude for the U.S army officer during theKorean war in 1950, Korean government bui
In the Second World War theJapanese army invaded and subsequently occupied Malaya, Sabah, Sarawak, and Singapore for over three years. During this time, ethnic tensions were raised and nationalism grew. Popular support for independence increased after Malaya was reconquered by Allied Forces. Post-war British plans to unite the administration of Malaya under a single crown colony called the Malay
Japanese bureaucrat, but they still existed.
After Korea became independent, at the beginning of establishing country, there were divided into two groups-right wing and left wing. Chosun-gunkook-Association(조선건국위원회) wa established by Yew Woon Young, An Jae Hong, Jung Paik’s group. And then, when it was sure that America will dominate Korea, right wing’s group separated from Cho
Korean Film in relation with Japanese Rules: Limitations
- The Border(국경, 1923, by Won San-man): First Korean complete feature film
- The Vow Made Below the Moon(월하의 맹세, 1923, by Yoon Back-nam)
- Story of Chun-hyang, Story of Jang-hwa and Hong-ryeon
- Park Seung-pil(Dansungsa Theater): first in-house film production
- Chosun Kinema(1924, Busan), Yoon Baek-nam Production(19