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"Migration and Religion in East Asia is a sensitive ethnography of the complex relations between North Korean migrant-refugees and South Korean Protestant Christians. Drawing on more than a decade of fieldwork involving missionary churches in northern China and a Pentecostal 'Freedom School' in Seoul, Jin-Heon Jung shows how North Korean migrant-refugees learn to locate themselves within a Cold War, evangelical, ethnonational soteriology by converting to Christianity and equating capitalist freedom with a new doctrine of individual "self-reliance." - Nicholas Harkness, Harvard University, USA
"In this book, Jin-Heon Jung explores interactions between North Korean migrants and South Korean Evangelicals [...]. This is a set of topics that have been woefully understudied; for taking them on, the author deserves our applause." - Timothy S. Lee, Texas Christian University, USA
"Jung has given us a fascinating account of how human life trajectories are constituted by conversion from Communism to Christianity in the dangerous move from North Korea to South Korea. This book brings us close to lived experience within the changing context of North-South relations in Korea. It highlights the politics of Christianity as well as the aftermath of the Korean War and is thus a must read for anyone interested in Asia, religion, and international relations." - Peter van der Veer, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious & Ethnic Diversity, Germany