Abstract
The Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) has been a global symbol of perpetual conflict, hatred and distrust since its establishment in 1953 after the Korean War. The 155-mile ceasefire line has given birth to moral pathologies in the minds of Korean people that include âotherness is evilâ, âcontainment of war is peaceâ and ârestoration of the same is unificationâ. The purpose of this article is to reduce these moral pathologies through Jacques Derridaâs deconstructive approach and Emmanuel Levinasâs ethics of the Other. Through tripartite reduction of these moral ideologies of the DMZ, an ethical thesis is developed that peace is not a mere state of the absence of war, but rather a welcoming of radical others and differences. It is also argued that unification is not about restoring the same âoriginal weâ, but about co-reconstruction of the âdemocratic weâ.
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