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BECA KOREAN COLLECTIONS CONSORTIUM OF NORTH AMERICA (KCCNA) 2023


Korean Collections Consortium of North America (KCCNA)

Research Travel Grants, 2023


El Korean Collections Consortium of North America (KCCNA) se complace en anunciar las Becas de viaje de investigación de KCCNA para ayudar a los estudiantes y académicos de estudios coreanos de todo el mundo en el uso de recursos bibliotecarios especializados en las trece universidades miembros de KCCNA. Este programa fue financiado por generosas subvenciones de la Korea Foundation durante tres años para 2018-2020, pero el programa de 2020 se canceló debido a la pandemia. Nos complace ofrecer el último y último año del programa en 2023. Este programa de becas para viajes de investigación está abierto a cualquier persona en el mundo, excepto a aquellos en Corea que ya tienen acceso a amplios recursos coreanos. La fecha límite de propuestas para el ciclo actual es el 31 de enero de 2023.


1. Descripción y Propósito

El Korean Collections Consortium of North America (KCCNA) se creó en 1994 con generosas subvenciones de la Korea Foundation. Sus miembros desarrollan y comparten en forma cooperativa recursos académicos especializados en estudios coreanos y brindan servicios bibliotecarios a una audiencia más amplia más allá de sus propias comunidades. La membresía actual consiste en las trece bibliotecas de estudios coreanos más grandes de los EE. UU. y Canadá. El programa de becas para viajes de investigación de KCCNA se creó para brindar financiamiento parcial a los académicos que necesitan viajar largas distancias para acceder a los recursos y servicios de las bibliotecas miembros de KCCNA. Vea la lista de miembros y sus colecciones especializadas en Miembros de KCCNA.


2. Elegibilidad

Este programa está abierto a cualquier persona en el mundo, excepto a aquellos en Corea que ya tienen acceso a amplios recursos coreanos.


3. Criterios de Selección

Si bien consideraremos todas las solicitudes en función de las fortalezas de la propuesta de investigación y la capacidad general de la biblioteca de destino para respaldar la investigación, las solicitudes que aborden los siguientes criterios recibirán una revisión preferencial:
  • Describa cómo su tema de investigación (sobre Corea o los ciudadanos coreanos) puede beneficiarse de los recursos especializados de KCCNA. Se requiere una lista de los recursos específicos que desea utilizar en la biblioteca, incluidos los enlaces o los números de llamada, si corresponde.
  • La necesidad de investigación in situ en la biblioteca de destino (¿por qué esa biblioteca en particular y no en otro lugar?)
  • Justificaciones para viajar para el acceso (¿algún otro medio de acceso, como en línea o ILL?

4. Bibliotecas participantes en 2023



5. Awards

El monto de la subvención será de hasta $1,500 para un estudiante que necesite viajar dentro de América del Norte continental, y de hasta $2,500 para estudiantes en el extranjero o hacia/desde Hawái.


6. Calendario para 2023
  • 31 de enero: Fecha límite de presentación de solicitudes
  • 20 de marzo: Notificación de premios
  • 31 de agosto: Fecha límite para el uso de la subvención

7. Requisitos para los beneficiarios/as de la subvención
  • Envíe un breve informe de actividad y un informe de gastos con recibos dentro de las dos semanas posteriores a la visita de investigación.
  • Los trabajos que resulten de la Beca de Investigación de KCCNA deben reconocer la beca en todas las publicaciones y/o presentaciones.
  • Las copias de regalo de todas las publicaciones resultantes de la subvención deben enviarse a la Biblioteca anfitriona. Si esto no es posible, las citas deben informarse a KCCNA y a la biblioteca anfitriona.

8. Logística
  • Las solicitudes se aceptarán en inglés o coreano.
  • Las solicitudes serán revisadas por un panel de bibliotecarios de KCCNA.
  • Los horarios de visita deben coordinarse con el bibliotecario anfitrión.
  • Las concesiones de las subvenciones se otorgarán sobre la base de un reembolso basado en los recibos apropiados. Los gastos reembolsables incluyen: pasajes aéreos, transporte terrestre desde y hacia los aeropuertos y alojamiento. Todos los demás gastos no serán elegibles para reembolso.
  • El Consorcio o la biblioteca anfitriona no brindarán asistencia para visas.

9. Formulario de solicitud y plazo

Las solicitudes se aceptarán en línea en el siguiente enlace.

Deadline: January 31, 2023


10. Consultas

Comité de Becas para Viajes de Investigación de KCCNA (Presidente - Yunah Sung, Universidad de Michigan)
  • email: kccnatravelgrant@umich.edu 

Korean Studies Librarian / Project Manager
414 Hatcher Graduate Library North
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1190
yunahs@umich.edu

CFP: “THE RISE OF ASIA IN GLOBAL HISTORY AND PERSPECTIVE”, INTERNATIONAL AND INTERDISCIPLINARY CONFERENCE


The Rise of Asia in Global History and Perspective”,

International and Interdisciplinary Conference

Paris and Le Havre; February 8-10, 2023


Global crisis: What impacts and what perspectives for Asia and the world?

The war in Ukraine, in all its dimensions, is producing alarming cascading effects to a world already battered by COVID-19 and climate change. Serious damage is being done to the global economy, and particularly to vulnerable people and developing countries.

The United Nations Secretary-General has established a Global Crisis Response Group on Food, Energy and Finance in the UN Secretariat, with the following policy recommendations:

On Food: We urge all countries to keep markets open, resist unjustified and unnecessary export restrictions, and make reserves available to countries at risk of hunger and famine.

On Energy: The use of strategic stockpiles and additional reserves could help to ease the energy crisis in the short term. But the only medium- and long-term solution is to accelerate the deployment of renewable energy.

On Finance: We need urgent action by the G20 and international financial institutions to increase liquidity and fiscal space so that governments can provide safety nets for the poorest and most vulnerable.


The global crisis described above has put Asia to the fore. Among the G20 members, eight of them are Asian and Eurasian: China, India, Indonesia, Japan, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Korea and Turkiye. Some of them are granary of food (Russia, Thailand, Vietnam…), of energy (Russia, Saudi Arabia…), of finance (China, Japan…). With the Pacific countries, Asia has set-up the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), a free trade agreement involving Australia, Brunei, Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Japan, South Korea, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, New Zealand, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam. The 15 member countries account for about 30% of the world's population (2.2 billion people) and 30% of global GDP ($29.7 trillion), making it the largest trade bloc in history. They have the necessary sources to be self sufficient among themselves: raw materials, human resources, technology, finance. The intra-Asia trade and investment have become more important than the extra-Asia ones. The major players of global geopolitics are led by Asian countries: BRICS, NAM, SCO…

So, what are the impacts of global crisis for Asia and the world? How States and societies react to the climate changes, pandemic Covic-19 and Russo-Ukrainian war? What perspectives coming out from the crisis? Will it lead to a new world order? Will the hegemony of the West continue to function? Will a new equilibrium of bipolar world be achieved? Will multipolarism prevail? What roles played by regional and international institutions such as EU, NATO, BRICS, NAM, SCO, ECOWAS, ASEAN, CELAC, MERCOSUR, UNASUR…? What actions taken by social movements and civil society organisations facing the crisis: trade unions, identity-based movements, ethnic and religious movements, indigenous communities, feminists, ecologists, cooperatives…?

It is to discuss about those such questions that the 7th edition of the Rise of Asia Conference Series is organised. It encourages the participation of scholars from a wide range of scientific disciplines (area studies, cultural studies, ecology, economics, geography, history, humanities, languages, management, political and social sciences…) and practitioners from diverse professional fields (business, civil society, education, enterprise, government, management, parliament, public policy, social and solidarity movements…) as well as artists and writers, based in diverse geographical areas (Africa, North, Central and South America, Australia, Asia, the Caribbean, Europe, Oceania, Pacific…).



The conference is open to individual and group presentation. 

The deadline of abstract submission is November 30, 2022

The call for abstracts and other information are available here.

CFP: FASHIONING THE ‘LITTLE PARISES’ OF THE WORLD. INTERLACED NATIONAL SYMBOLS


Fashioning the ‘Little Parises’ of the World.

Interlaced National Symbols


Introduction:

In April 1947, Vogue Paris heralded the beginning of a new world on its way to leave World War Two in the past with the New Look paraded by “mythical” and “composite” models dressed by Christian Dior. Seventy-four years later, in the autumn of 2021, Vogue Paris ceased to exist in favour of Vogue France, reflecting globalisation, as “creativity, culture, art and fashion are everywhere”. Both moments represented social and cultural turning points most visible through fashion and one of its main avenues of expression, Vogue. Dior’s New Look utilised the remains of Parisian exclusivity as an inspiration for women to forego scarcity-laden habits and appearance imposed during the war. On the opposite side of the spectrum, the effort ignited by Anna Wintour is centred around inclusivity, where Paris seems to have lost its symbolic value, at least at face value. But is this the demise of the proverbial Parisienne, the transnational elegant woman embodying the esprit parisien (Rocamora 2006, p. 51)? Are Paris, the Parisienne and fashion still synonymous as Valerie Steele (2017, p. 93) had asserted shortly before the Vogue shift? Is this apparently inconsequential name change part of a decolonisation movement that has now come to be manifested through a needed change for one of the most recognisable fashion publications? Has Paris as a symbolic marker of modernity and elegance finally declared itself obsolete? Then why do notions like ‘Little Paris’ still draw so much attention and significance around the world? What of cities like Bucharest attempting to reclaim its pre-Communist spirit by sometimes over-inflating the ‘Little Paris’ notion? What of cities that in some way, materially or symbolically emulate “something of Paris”?

This book uses a multi-perspective approach to urban spaces applicable to the ‘Little Paris’ designation. It blends Mike Featherstone’s (1995, p. 1) assertion that global culture transcends society and national borders with its application to fashion as an inherently transnational phenomenon, as explained by Djurdja Bartlett (2019, p. 33). This book aims to explore the various possible interpretations for the ‘Little Paris’ symbol outside of the ‘original Paris’ context and its relationships to other major cities across the world. It inquires whether the ‘Little Paris’ mythology itself is an extension of colonial expansion, a global phenomenon using the French capital as the best manifestation of creative and cultural modernity through fashion, an acknowledgement of the official, collective and individual efforts within and around Paris to foster and promote fashion, or is it a hybrid symbol, perfectly compatible with the ambivalence and fluidity of modernity itself. Fashion’s ability to sustain material-symbolic, elegance-kitsch, creativity-intellect or tradition-innovation dichotomies as extended timelines including everything in-between is the perfect backdrop for a panoramic analysis of the spread, effect, reception and continuation of the esprit parisien.

In a gendered context, fashion industry, as one of the main phenomena linked to Paris, is a traditional professional path for women as creators, technicians, disseminators and in many cases commentators, strengthened during modernity (Lundén 2020, p. 252). Even more, the fashionability lure attributed to the ‘original’ Paris during modernity is heavily reliant on its active and burgeoning community of talented artistic, creative and technical immigrants, especially from Eastern Europe (Kurkdjian 2020, p. 379). This would then come as a counter-argument to the idea that Vogue Paris was only relevant for Parisians, understood as physical residents of Paris and possibly Île-de-France as the extended Greater Paris area. This book and its contributions contribute to a deeper, nuanced understanding of Parisian fashion within a transnational, transdisciplinary frame of reference. It comes to reconcile discourses on inclusivity and exclusivity under a comprehensive interpretation of esprit parisien beyond physical, geographical, cultural or ideological limitations.


The Book’s Objective

As Vogue Paris, the only edition containing a city name, became Vogue France, the question of Paris as fashion capital is ever more pressing on grounds built upon dichotomic pairs like inclusivity-exclusivity, material-symbolic, global-local. Fashioning the ‘Little Parises’ of the World is a collective, edited volume exploring the Parisian spirit (esprit parisien) through fashion, using a diverse host of urban locations drawing material and symbolic inspiration from Paris, beyond ‘Little Paris’ nicknames. It inquires how national identities and each location’s specific spirit are enforced or encroached when blended with the esprit parisien. Each contribution offers a unique interpretation of a global symbol, Paris, through one of its chief associations, fashion. Fashioning the ‘Little Parises’ of the World relativises the meaning of Paris fashion, understanding that, at least in the twentieth century, foreign Western and non-Western cityspaces and urban enclaves readily and enthusiastically assumed some sort of connection to Paris using aesthetic, conceptual or physical reasonings. It inquires whether Paris as a cultural, artistic and craft cosmopolitan hub was not inclusive from the start as it emanated exclusivity through exquisite physical and symbolic results that could not have been achieved anywhere else.


Target Audience:

This book addresses English-speaking academic and non-academic audiences who wish to explore global fashion cultures and their relationship to Paris as a long-standing point of influence. It will be accessible to readers with a basic understanding of the connection between Paris and global fashion, including internationally recognisable brand names from Chanel to Vogue. It will also appeal to readers with an interest in any of the mentioned locations from a current, historical, geographical, cultural or artistic perspective. The book will address fashion scholars and historians as it is built upon the global reach of Paris fashion, a leitmotif in fashion studies and histories. The collection brings together themes and locations that have been generally treated separately or marginally, integrating them into the larger, growing discussion of transnational fashion practices. It will be of interest to both students and established scholars as a reference text and a possible avenue for further research on any of the topics approached.
  • Recommended topics include, but are not limited to, the following: Main keywords for the book: Paris, fashion, city, identity.
  • Suggested fields: cultural studies (fashion, urban, media), history (art, social, cultural, critical), postcolonialism, symbolic geographies.
  • Urban ‘Little Paris’ spaces:
    • Little Paris of the Balkans
    • Paris of the Orient (Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City or its former name Saigon in Vietnam, Shanghai China)
    • Little Paris and any translation, in any language or national/cultural context
    • Cities nicknamed ‘Little Paris’, including Atça Turkey, Bucharest Romania, Da Lat Vietnam, Sinj Croatia.
    • Cities built after Paris, including Tianducheng China.
    • Cities named Paris in USA, Canada, Denmark, Kiribati, Panama, Puerto Rico, etc.
    • Any ‘Little Paris’ connection in Europe, North and South America, Asia, Australia, the Pacific or the Southern Hemisphere.
  • ‘Little Paris’ themes:esprit parisien, la Parisienne across the world
    • worldwide spread of Parisian and French fashion and influence
    • fashion capitals, cities of fashion (besides Paris)
    • fashion industry, haute couture, prêt-à-porter from Paris worldwide
    • transnational and global fashion
    • Westernisation and/or modernisation through Parisian fashion ideas
    • Historical ‘Little Parises’ presented and analysed for a contemporary audience
    • Current ‘Little Parises’ presented and analysed considering their historical, social, cultural and geographic context

Contents (Working Chapter Structure):

1. Introduction

2. European ‘Little Parises’
  1. Re-Fashioning Old Mythologies: The Recovery of Cultural and National Identities through ‘Little Paris’ References in Post-1989 Romania (Sonia D. Andra?) analyses the complex discourse on interwar Romania since the 1989 Revolution, ranging from romanticised nostalgia for a now-lost golden age, of the ‘old Bucharest’, to virulent abhorrence reminiscent of ideologized Communist Romanian representations. The aim is to identify the common threads and the possible ramifications of creating, propagating and reframing ‘Little Paris’ for Romania and beyond. This chapter juxtaposes visual and textual references to ‘Little Paris’ in interwar literature with their reiterations relevant to Bucharest’s ‘Little Paris’ spaces, since 1989 as continuations or ruptures from the Communist Romanian discourse. These spaces include public urban locations where Western modernity could be easily witnessed through fashionable women amid professional and leisure activities. This chapter uses fashion studies as a methodological frame and visual and textual discourse analysis for the relevant interwar and contemporary primary sources. It offers a comprehensive analysis of how ‘Little Paris’ and, more generally, interwar Bucharest functions as a tool in crafting national, ideological, identity and cultural directions for a renewed spirit bucure?tean (Bucharest spirit).
3. African ‘Little Parises’

4. Middle Eastern ‘Little Parises’

5. East-Asian ‘Little Parises’

6. American ‘Little Parises’

7. Little Parises’ in the Pacific and the Southern Hemisphere


Submission Procedure:

Interested researchers and authors are invited to submit by 1 December 2022 an abstract for their proposed chapter (up to 250 words) and a short description of the author(s), including current affiliation and position (if any). Accepted authors will be notified by 8 December 2022. The deadline for the full chapter submission is 31 March 2023 for the completed draft manuscript to be submitted for review by 1 June 2023. All submissions and inquiries should be emailed to sonia.d.andras@outlook.com.


Full Chapter Submission:

The chapter will be written in UK English and will not exceed 6000 words, including notes and bibliography. The text will use New Hart’s Rules (Oxford) for referencing and style, with citations in brackets and a Bibliography at the end. Footnotes are preferred, but sparingly. Please follow the Bloomsbury style guidelines applied to UK English.

There are no submission or acceptance fees for chapters that will be included in The ‘Little Parises’ of the World. All chapters will go through a double-blind peer review editorial process when the final draft manuscript will be submitted to the publisher.


Publisher:

Bloomsbury UK have expressed interest in considering the work for possible publication.


Important Dates:
  • Abstract submission deadline: 1 December 2022
  • Notifications of accepted abstracts: 8 December 2022
  • Full chapter submission deadline: 17 March 2023
  • Review results returned: 24 March 2023
  • Final acceptance notification: 31 March 2023
  • Final chapter submission: 21 April 2023
  • Complete draft manuscript submitted to publisher: 1 June 2023

Editor:

Dr. Sonia D. Andraş, Cultural and Fashion Studies researcher, The “Gheorghe Şincai” Institute for Social Sciences and Humanities, Târgu-Mureş, Romania. Author of The Women of ‘Little Paris’: Women’s Fashion in Bucharest (forthcoming with Bloomsbury UK).


Inquiries can be forwarded to:

Sonia D. Andraş: sonia.d.andras@outlook.com

CFP: FROM EMPIRE TO FEDERATION: IDEAS AND PRACTICES OF DIVERSITY MANAGEMENT IN EURASIA, 1876-1949


From Empire to Federation:

Ideas and Practices of Diversity Management in Eurasia, 1876–1949


Ivan Sablin (Heidelberg University / Institute of Contemporary History, Ljubljana) and Egas Moniz Bandeira (University of Erlangen-Nuremberg / Max Planck Institute for Legal History and Legal Theory, Frankfurt) invite chapter proposals on federalist and autonomist projects and designs in Southeast Asia (in Malaysia, Indonesia, or Indochina) for the edited volume From Empire to Federation: Ideas and Practices of Diversity Management in Eurasia, 1876–1949.

The global imperial crisis of the early twentieth century stimulated the debates on the alternatives to dynastic or external rulership across Eurasia. The collapse of the imperial and colonial structures of rule was followed by widespread instability and uncertainties, to which various authoritarian and centralizing forms of government were often deemed to be an answer. The present volume shows that these were not uncontested, but that they competed with decentralized, federalist and autonomist visions, which provided alternatives to centralizing designs in East Asia, Russia, Southeastern Europa, South and Southeast Asia, and the Ottoman Empire.

Together with the widely spread discourse of national independence, ideas of federation and autonomy proved extremely popular in (post)imperial and (post)colonial intellectual circles. Unlike nation-states, federations and states with autonomies promised to resolve the crisis of sovereignty while at the same time respecting various competing economic and social spaces of larger territories. Given the multiplicity and dynamics of social categories in the composite spaces of empires, it was not only ethnicity (nationality), but also religious and regional categories which were politicized and used to justify federal and autonomous designs. Discourses of decentralization and reintegration of economic and social spaces on new principles circulated across the existing borders, spread across different contexts, and contributed to a variety of outcomes of the postimperial and postcolonial transformations in Eurasia.

This volume seeks to enrich the global history of concepts, institutions, and political practices by scrutinizing the takes on federalism, autonomy, and other forms of decentralization outside the Western European and North American world. In particular, the volume addresses concepts, discourses, and designs pertaining to (post)imperial and (post)colonial projects of decentralization and diversity management; actors, including intellectuals, activists, and politicians which had been marginalized within the imperial and colonial contexts; intellectual and political legacies of the imperial regimes, including the attempts to create modern, inclusionary and differentiated political communities; as well as vernacular and external inspirations for the specific designs and their implementation.

Please submit an abstract of 150–300 words and a short bio to ENTPAR.Heidelberg@gmail.com by December 1, 2022.


Contact Info:



Contact Email:

ENTPAR.Heidelberg@gmail.com