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UPCOMING EVENTS


September 25, 2013

Comfort Women Wanted


November 13, 2013

Colonial Korean Cinema: Love, Identity, and Propaganda


November 15, 2013

The Sixth Annual North American Workshop on Korean Literature 2013

 

The Journal of Korean Studies special issue 2015

Call for Papers on "Korean Culture, New Media, Digital Humanities"

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Upcoming Events and Announcements

Fall 2013

 

Comfort Women Wanted

A Video Screening and Panel Discussion

Charles Armstrong (moderator), Professor of History, Columbia University; Elazar Barkan, Professor of International and Public Affairs; Pablo Castillo-Diaz, Protection Analyst, Peace and Security at the UN; Chang-Jin Lee, visual artist; Martgaret Stetz, Mae and Robert Carter Professor of Women's Studies & Professor of Humanities, University of Delaware; Joyce Yu, UN Resident Coordinator

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

2:00 PM - 4:00 PM

918 International Affairs Building

No registration required.

Co-sponsored by the Institute for the Study of Human Rights

The video is based on visual artist Chang-Jin Lee’s interviews with Korean, Chinese, Taiwanese, Indonesian, Dutch, and Filipino "comfort women" survivors, and a former Japanese soldier. To watch a trailer, go to http://www.changjinlee.net/.


Colloquium Series on Korean Cultural Studies

"Colonial Korean Cinema: Love, Identity, and Propaganda"

Kelly Jeong, Associate Professor, University of California at Riverside

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

12:00 PM - 1:30 PM

918 International Affairs Building

No registration required.

 

Colloquium Series on Korean Cultural Studies
Title: TBA

Suzy Kim, Assistant Professor of Korean History, Rutgers University

Friday, November 8, 2013

5:30 PM - 7:00 PM

918 International Affairs Building

No registration required.

 

The Sixth North American Workshop on Korean Literature: NAOKOL 2013

Date: November 15, 2013
Venue: Columbia University
Sponsors: LTI Korea; Center for Korean Research and Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures, Columbia University

 

Spring 2014

Colloquium Series on Korean Cultural Studies
Title: TBA

Jun Yoo, Associate Professor of Modern Korean History, East Asia, Colonialism, Cultural & Gender Studies, University of Hawaii at Manoa

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

5:30 PM - 7:00 PM

918 International Affairs Building

No registration required.

 

Colloquium Series on Korean Cultural Studies
Title: TBA

Namhee Lee, Associate Professor of Modern Korean History, University of California, Los Angeles

Spring 2014

5:30 PM - 7:00 PM

918 International Affairs Building

No registration required.

 

Call for Papers on "Korean Culture, New Media, Digital Humanities"

Thematic issue of The Journal of Korean Studies, Volume 20 No. 2 (Fall  2015)

The Journal of Korean Studies special issue 2015

Due July 31, 2014

 

What are the relations between print-based Korean cultural production  and new media? How did old media that were once considered new--radio,  film, and television, for example--interact with each other and with  older print-based forms in colonial and/or postcolonial Korea? In what  ways do contemporary new media shape current forms of experimental  and/or popular literary, filmic, and artistic practices in an  increasingly globalized context? How will research methodologies  associated with the digital humanities change the way we approach  scholarly work on Korea?

The 2015 thematic issue of The Journal of Korean Studies invites  papers that take an interdisciplinary approach in exploring the  significance of new media and digital humanities to studies of Korean literature, film, visual culture, and history. We welcome papers that  focus on the use of new media and technologies (for example, digital  reading, computer-generated imagery, installation or performance art that negotiates real and virtual worlds), as well as papers dealing  with any period (premodern/modern) that both comment upon use of  digital humanities-related research methods and employ them in the paper itself. We encourage manuscripts on Korean cultural production  that take into consideration in some way one or more of the following: the history of media in Korea; the relations among different media in  the twentieth century; interactions between  changing technologies and  questionings of the "human"; the digital turn that informs the  contemporary scene.

Those whose papers are selected for the special issue will be invited to present their work-in-progress for discussion at a workshop to be held at Columbia University in Fall 2014. The workshop will be co-sponsored by the Center for Korean Research, Columbia University; the Department of East Asian Studies, Smith College; and the Journal of Korean Studies. This special issue of The Journal of Korean Studies will be guest edited by Theodore Hughes and Jina Kim.

Articles appearing in the JKS are abstracted and indexed in the Social Sciences Citation Index (SSCI), Sociological Abstracts, Social Services Abstracts, Worldwide Political Science Abstracts, PAIS International, Linguistics and Language Behavior Abstracts, Bibliography of Asian Studies, Historical Abstracts, and America: History and Life.

JKS is a peer-reviewed journal and all papers will be vetted by two outside readers.

Please submit your manuscript by July 31, 2014 to Tracy Stober, JKS Managing Editor, at jourks@u.washington.edu, Theodore Hughes at th2150@columbia.edu, and Jina Kim at jkim@smith.edu.

For detailed information on the submission process please visit The Journal of Korean Studies website:
http://jsis.washington.edu/korea/jks/submissionguidelines.shtml