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The Chosun Ilbo
South Korean daily newspaper
South Korean daily newspaper
| Field | Value | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| name | The Chosun Ilbo | ||||||
| logo | [[File:Chosun IIbo Logo.svg | class=skin-invert | 240px]] | ||||
| image | Chosun Ilbo Building.jpg | ||||||
| caption | The Chosun Ilbo Building in Gwanghwamun Plaza (2012) | ||||||
| type | Daily newspaper | ||||||
| format | Broadsheet | ||||||
| founded | 5 March 1920 | ||||||
| founder | Sin Sogu | ||||||
| owners | |||||||
| political_position | {{ublist | class = nowrap | |||||
| Right-wing<ref name | "Press Freedom in Contemporary Asia" / | ||||||
| Conservatism<ref name | "ChosunCriticism" | ||||||
| Anti-communism<ref name | "ChosunCriticism"/ | ||||||
| Far-right<ref>{{cite book | editor | 강준만 | script-title=ko:지식 권력도 교체하자 | date=1998 | page=302 | publisher=개마 고원 | isbn=9788985548267 }} |
| Pro-military<ref name | "ChosunCriticism"/ | ||||||
| Pro-Chinilpa<ref name | "ChosunCriticism"/ | ||||||
| Pro-Empire of Japan<ref name | "ChosunCriticism"/ | ||||||
| headquarters | Jung District, Seoul, South Korea | ||||||
| president | Bang Sang-Hun | ||||||
| editor | Park Doo-Sik | ||||||
| language | Korean | ||||||
| website | |||||||
| circulation | {{bulleted list | ||||||
| module | {{Infobox Korean name/auto | ||||||
| hangul | ^조선_일보 | ||||||
| hanja | 朝鮮日報 | ||||||
| child | yes |
| Right-wing | Conservatism | Anti-communism | Historical: | Far-right | Pro-military | Pro-Chinilpa | Pro-Empire of Japan
5,262,070 news subscribers| 4,000,000+ digital-only| 1,212,208 print| 49,862 print for child
The Chosun Ilbo (, ), also known as The Chosun Daily, is a Korean-language newspaper of record for South Korea and among the oldest active newspapers in the country. With a daily circulation of more than 1,800,000, The Chosun Ilbo has been audited annually since the Audit Bureau of Circulations was established in 1993. The Chosun Ilbo and its subsidiary company, Digital Chosun, operate the Chosun.com news website, which also publishes news in English, Chinese, and Japanese.
History
The Chosun Ilbo Establishment Union was created in September 1919. The Chosun Ilbo newspaper was founded on 5 March 1920 by Sin Sogu with the financial support of the Daejong Business Association. Cho Jin-Tae, the vice-chairman of the Daejong Business Association was appointed the first President of the newspaper in 1920. However, as the Business Association failed to pay promised finances, the relationship between the Association and The Chosun Ilbo broke down five months after its founding, and Cho Jin-Tae was replaced by Yoo Moon-Hwan on 15 August 1920.
On 6 April 1921, after only a year of publishing, The Chosun Ilbo went on hiatus due to financial troubles.
On 31 July 1940, the newspaper published "Lessons of American Realism", the fourth part of an editorial series. Ten days later – following issue 6,923 – the paper was declared officially discontinued by the Japanese ruling government. In the twenty years since its founding, the paper had been suspended by the Japanese government four times, and its issues confiscated over five hundred times before 1932.
When Korea gained independence in 1945, The Chosun Ilbo resumed publication after a five-year, three-month hiatus.
On 1 March 1999, The Chosun Ilbo announced that starting the following day (2 March 1999), it would be switching to the horizontal left-to-right writing style already adopted by most other newspapers by the time, ahead of the paper's 79th anniversary. It also made a commitment to preserve and continue using hanja characters despite the change. Consequently, the 1 March 1999 issue (Issue No. 24305) became the last issue of The Chosun Ilbo written in the vertical right-to-left style and the last mainstream Korean paper that published in the style. All issues since 2 March 1999 have been in the modern horizontal left-to-right style.
Subsidiaries
Besides the daily newspaper, the company also publishes the Weekly Chosun, the Monthly Chosun, Digital Chosun, Edu-Chosun, and ChosunBiz.
Controversies
The Chosun Ilbo has historically taken a hardline stance against North Korea. For example, it opposed South Korean President Kim Dae-jung's Sunshine Policy, aimed at engaging North Korea through cooperation, mitigating the gap in economic power and restoring lost communication between the two Koreas. For this reason, the newspaper has attracted heavy criticism and threats from the North.
On 6 April 2019, Deutsche Welle described The Chosun Ilbo as "an outlet notorious for its dubious and politically motivated" reporting on North Korea.
On 31 May 2019, the newspaper reported that, based on "an unidentified source", the head diplomat of North Korea's nuclear envoy Kim Hyok-chol, had been executed by a North Korean Government firing squad. However, two days later, on 2 June 2019, the top diplomat was seen at a concert sitting a few seats away from North Korea's leader Kim Jong Un.
The Educational Broadcasting System's popular instructor Choi Tae-seong, sued a Chosun Ilbo reporter for publishing an article that defamed him as a supporter of North Korea.
The Chosun Ilbo has been accused of being "chinilbanminjokhaengwi" (친일반민족행위, 親日反民族行爲, "pro-Japanese anti-nationalist activist"), because of controversy over its advocacy of the Korea under Japanese rule. In 2005, the South Korean government and Korean nationalist civic activists investigated whether Chosun Ilbo 'collaborated' with the Japanese Empire. The Chosun Ilbo published articles described as excessively praising the Imperial House of Japan every year from 1938 to 1940. Until 1987, the newspaper had reported favorably on South Korea's military dictatorships.
In 2002, the prosecution sought a sentence of seven years in prison and a fine of 12 billion won for The Chosun Ilbo chairman Bang Sang-hoon, who was indicted on charges of tax evasion and embezzlement. Chairman Bang was accused of evading 6.2 billion won in gift and corporate taxes, as well as embezzling 4.5 billion won in company funds. He was arrested in August of the previous year but was released on bail and has been on trial since. On June 29, 2006, he was indicted for evading 2.35 billion won in gift taxes by transferring 65,000 shares of The Chosun Ilbo to his son through a nominal trust, and for misusing 2.57 billion won in company funds under the names of family members to increase capital in affiliates like Jogwang Publishing and Sports Chosun. The Supreme Court sentenced Chairman Bang to three years in prison with a four-year suspended sentence and a fine of 2.5 billion won for tax evasion and the misappropriation of company funds.
Gallery
|File:ChosunIlbo (January1-1940).jpg|The Chosun Ilbo on January 1, 1940
Notes
References
References
- (March 10, 2020). "친일·독재 찬양 흑역사는 쏙 뺀 조선일보의 '반쪽 100년사'". [[The Hankyoreh]].
- (1998). 개마 고원
- (2007). "(pt. 1-3) 친일반민족행위 결정 이유서". [[:ko:대한민국 친일반민족행위진상규명위원회.
- (2002). 인물 과 사상사
- (2020). "Press Freedom in Contemporary Asia". Routledge.
- (2017). "How partisan newspapers represented a pandemic: the case of the Middle East respiratory syndrome in South Korea". Asian Journal of Communication.
- (2019). "Ideological parallelism: toward a transnational understanding of the protest paradigm". Social Movement Studies.
- (August 2018). "Korean Communication, Media, and Culture: An Annotated Bibliography". [[Lexington Books]].
- (2009). "Korea Yearbook (2009): Politics, Economy and Society". BRILL.
- Chosun Iilbo http://english.chosun.com/site/data/html_dir/2010/11/30/2010113001011.html {{Webarchive. link. (4 March 2016)
- "The Asia-Pacific Perceptions Project". [[University of Canterbury]].
- Hoare, James E.. (2015). "Historical Dictionary of the Republic of Korea, Third Edition". Rowman & Littlefield.
- (2013). "Korea: A Historical and Cultural Dictionary". Routledge.
- (2020-08-03). link
- Kim, Choon-Hee. (2020). "Jamesian Cultural Anxiety in the East and West: The Co-Constitutive Nature of the Cosmopolite Spirit". Cambridge Scholars Publishing.
- link
- "North Korea: Fake news on both sides is the norm".
- [https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/world/2019/05/31/north-korea-executes-senior-officials-over-failed-trump-summit-report/1296383001/ "North Korea executes nuclear envoy to U.S. after failed Trump summit: report."] {{Webarchive. link. (2 June 2019 Kim Hjelmgaard. ''USA Today''. 31 May 2019. Accessed 3 June 2019.)
- [https://www.latimes.com/world/la-fg-north-korea-purge-hanoi-20190531-story.html?amp ''North Korea executed top negotiator, purged others over failed Trump summit, report says.''] {{Webarchive. link. (12 January 2020 Victoria Kim. ''Los Angeles Times''. 31 May 2019. Accessed 3 June 2019.)
- [https://www.france24.com/en/20190531-north-korea-executed-officials-kim-trump-summit-vietnam-usa "North Korea 'executed' officials after failed Trump summit: report."] {{Webarchive. link. (4 June 2019 France 24 TV. 31 May 2019. Accessed 3 June 2019.)
- [https://www.usnews.com/news/world/articles/2019-05-30/north-koreas-kim-jong-un-carrying-out-purge-after-hanoi-summit-collapse-chosun-ilbo "North Korea Executes Envoy to Failed U.S. Summit -Media; White House Monitoring."] {{Webarchive. link. (4 June 2019 Hyonhee Shin and Joyce Lee. U.S. News & World Report. 31 May 2019. Accessed 3 June 2019.)
- [https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/may/31/north-korea-executes-envoy-to-us-after-trump-summit-failures "US checking reports North Korea executed envoy, says Pompeo: South Korean paper claims Kim Hyok-chol has been killed and a negotiator put in forced labour."] {{Webarchive. link. (4 June 2019 Justin McCurry. ''The Guardian''. London, England. 31 May 2019. Accessed 3 June 2019.)
- [https://m.cnn.com/en/article/h_6296d295e0e3f2014fdfcc1b013de43a "US checking reports North Korea executed top official after Trump summit, Pompeo says."] {{Webarchive. link. (4 June 2019 CNN. 1 June 2019. Accessed 3 June 2019.)
- [https://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/top-north-korean-official-reappears-days-purge-report-63442387 ''Top North Korean official reappears days after purge report.''] {{Webarchive. link. (3 June 2019 Kim Tong-Hyung, Associated Press. 3 June 2019. Accessed 3 June 2019.)
- [https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/jun/03/senior-north-korean-official-kim-yong-chol-reappears-after-forced-labour-report "Senior North Korean official reappears after 'forced labour' report: Photo shows Kim Yong-chol attended an art performance with Kim Jong-un on Sunday."] {{Webarchive. link. (4 June 2019 Daniel Hurst. ''The Guardian''. 3 June 2019. Accessed 3 June 2019.)
- [https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/asia_pacific/purged-not-purged-leading-north-korean-official-re-emerges-in-public/2019/06/03/fbb55d02-85f6-11e9-98c1-e945ae5db8fb_story.html ''Purged? Not purged. Leading North Korean official reemerges in public.''] {{Webarchive. link. (4 June 2019 Min Joo Kim and Simon Denyer . 3 June 2019. Accessed 3 June 2019.)
- Lee Hui-jin (이희진). (11 August 2011). "EBS 강사, 명예훼손 혐의로 조선일보 기자 고소". [[No Cut News]].
- (October 20, 2019). link
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