Una vez más, exploramos las publicaciones académicas más recientes en los estudios coreanos, abarcando diversas áreas del conocimiento. Desde las ciencias sociales, donde se abordan temas como la política, la migración y las prácticas educativas, hasta las humanidades, que nos ofrecen nuevas perspectivas sobre la cultura popular, la filosofía y las artes contemporáneas de Corea. Estas investigaciones revelan cómo las tradiciones, las transformaciones sociales y las influencias globales configuran la Corea del presente.
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Corea del Norte. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Corea del Norte. Mostrar todas las entradas
CFP: THE PALGRAVE HANDBOOK OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH IN EAST ASIA: CHINA, KOREA AND JAPAN
This three-section Handbook provides information on the Catholic Church in East Asia—China mainland, Mongolia, Macau, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Korea, and Japan—from its beginnings to the present. It aims to offer sufficient material and analysis for the study and research of the East Asian Catholic Church. It follows a chronological framework tracing events from the 7th century to the 21st century.
The editors are seeking authors for the three-section Handbook (the titles of the following chapters can be changed) (each chapter is about 30 pages and 16,500 words)
1. "Bible and Religious Literature Translation and Indigenous Religious Texts: Korea"
2. "Evangelization through Paintings and Sculptures (Images) in Korea
3. Foreign Missionaries, 1900-1945: Japan
4. Colonialism, Imperialism, and Relations with Local Powers: Japan"
5. Foreign Missionaries and the Building of the local Church Hierachy: 1945 to the Present
6. Evangelization through Education from Simple Schooling to Universities: Japan
Contact Information
Professor
AAB 1152,
Academic and Administration Building,
15 Baptist University Road,
Kowloon Tong, Kowloon
Hong Kong
Tel: (852) 3411 7182
Contact Email: cindychu@hkbu.edu.hk
DIÁLOGO CASA ASIA "LO INSÓLITO: IMÁGENES A DESCUBRIR DE LA NARRATIVA COREANA DEL SIGLO XXI"
Diálogo Casa Asia
«Lo insólito: imágenes a descubrir de la narrativa coreana del siglo XXI»
En esta mesa redonda, asistiremos a un diálogo sobre la narrativa coreana actual desde una mirada que recupera lo insólito, lo extraordinario y un gusto latinoamericano por las historias fantásticas al estilo de Borges y Cortázar.
Este enfoque supone un desafío a nuestras expectativas respecto a historias de lo cotidiano, esta vez con varias autoras y autores coreanos que van desde la ciencia ficción y el terror hasta lo satírico.
Con esto queremos poner en valor la traducción reciente en España de libros de cuentos de Bora Chung como el finalista del prestigioso Booker Prize Conejo Maldito hasta la colección Aspirina de Park Min-gyu y ponernos en sintonía con narrativas coreanas que sorprenderán los gustos de lectores y lectoras.
Palabras de bienvenida:
Emilio de Miguel, director del Centro Casa Asia-Madrid
Programa:
- Ponencia: Park Min-gyu, Bora Chung y Kim Cho-yeop: traducciones recientes al castellano de la imaginación coreana
Danilo Santos López, doctor en Literatura por la Universidad de Buenos Aires y director del Magíster en Literatura en la Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
- Ponencia: Mil tipos de azul de Cheon Seon-ran: solidaridad entre seres (in)completos a través de la imaginación literaria
Chaeyeon Park, profesora asociada de Estudios Coreanos en la Universidad de Salamanca y profesora de idioma coreano en el Centro Superior de Idiomas Modernos de la Universidad Complutense
- Ponencia: Rutinas atravesadas por lo extraño: la cotidianidad del siglo XXI imaginada en los cuentos de Kim Young-ha y de Han Kang
Paula Libuy Pulgar, doctoranda en Literatura de la Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Magíster en Literatura y Licenciada en Letras Hispánicas por la misma institución.
Más Información:
- Fecha: Lunes 6 de noviembre, de 17.00 h a 18.30 h CET
- Lugar: Centro Casa Asia-Madrid, Calle Mayor, 69, Madrid
- Precio: Entrada gratuita previa inscripción
- Organiza: Casa Asia, con la colaboración de ADECCE – Asociación de Difusión de Estudios y Cultura Coreana en España y la Facultad de Letras de la Universidad Pontificia Católica de Chile
CONCURSO DE RELATOS "LA REALIDAD DE LOS DERECHOS HUMANOS EN COREA DEL NORTE"
Concurso de relatos
“La realidad de los derechos humanos en Corea del Norte”
La Delegación en España del Consejo de Unificación Pacífica en colaboración a KOWIN Spain (Korean Women’s International Network) y el Área de Estudios de Asia Oriental de la Universidad Complutense de Madrid organizan el concurso de relatos “La realidad de los derechos humanos en Corea del Norte”. Está dirigido a todos los jóvenes coreanos y españoles menores de 35 años con el objetivo de promover la conciencia de la unificación y reunir ideas comunes sobre la unificación a través de cuestiones relacionadas con los derechos humanos en Corea del Norte.
Para ello, los candidatos pueden presentar su relato en torno a uno de los tres temas propuestos:
- Los derechos humanos de los niños
- Los derechos humanos de las mujeres
- Los derechos humanos de los residentes en Corea del Norte
La dotación del premio cuenta con una doble categoría: relatos en coreano y relatos en español:
- Primer premio: 800€
- Primer premio E.S.O. y Bachillerato: 500€
- Primer premio Universidad: 500€
Plazo de presentación de relatos: del 5 de octubre al 5 de noviembre de 2023.
Para más información o enviar las propuestas: Eunsook Yang, eunyang@ucm.es
CFP: 2023 IKSU-K-UNIFICATION FRIENDS INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE FOR YOUNG SCHOLARS
Tracing the Steps Toward Korean Unification: Learning from the Past to Prepare for the Future,
2023 IKSU International Young Scholars Conference
The International Institute of Korean Studies (IKSU) at the University of Central Lancashire (UCLan) is pleased to announce the 2-day 2023 IKSU International Young Scholars Conference. The conference aims to give junior scholars in the field of Korean studies and unification studies an opportunity to present their research, strengthen ties with other young scholars, and raise awareness of the unification issue in the Korean peninsula among the youth.
The conference aims to facilitate informed, interdisciplinary discussions on the potential benefits and challenges of Korean Unification by looking into how we can learn from the past toward preparing for the future. We are inviting young scholars aged between 19-34 including early career researchers who obtained their PhD degree in the recent five years and PhD candidates who are near to completion of their PhD programmes doing their research in relation to the theme of the forum.
- Submission Details: Abstract Submission Deadline (max. 500 words): 15 October 2023
- Acceptance Notice: 31 October 2023
- Full Paper Submission Deadline (min. 4,000 words including references): 20 November 2023
- Conference Dates: 1-2 December 2023.
Presenters will receive an honorarium of KRW 400,000 upon successful submission of a policy brief following the conference. Participants are expected to summarize their research into a 1-2 page-long policy brief that will be published through the Northern England Policy Centre for the Asia Pacific (NEPCAP) website.
CURSO ONLINE DE IDIOMA COREANO (NIVEL A1.1, PARTE 3), CASA ASIA
Curso online de Idioma coreano
(nivel A1.1, parte 3), Casa Asia
El idioma coreano es la lengua oficial de Corea del Norte y del Sur. Hablado por casi 80 millones de personas, la escritura coreana (Hangeul) es un sistema fonológico de rápido aprendizaje creado por el rey Sejong el Grande durante el siglo XV para que su pueblo, frustrado por no poder expresar sus sentimientos mediante los caracteres chinos, pudiera leer y escribir fácilmente, con lo que el analfabetismo es prácticamente inexistente en Corea. El Hangeul es una escritura científica que fue seleccionada como “Patrimonio Cultural de Literatura” por la UNESCO en 1997.
Consulte el calendario del curso aquí.
El interés hacia Corea se ha incrementado paulatinamente con las telenovelas, el cine y la música (k-pop), conectándose con otros iconos más tradicionales como el Taekwondo (arte marcial que une la mente con el cuerpo), el Hanbok (vestido de diseño tradicional), el Kimchi (que representa su gastronomía saludable), el Hanji (la elegancia y durabilidad del papel de seda) o el Hanok (el sistema de calefacción bajo el suelo) y los productos tecnológicos coreanos. La Corea de hoy es el reflejo de una transformación constante, a la vez que una capacidad para conservar sus raíces más profundas. La capacidad de innovación de su población la ha colocado entre las primeras economías desarrolladas del mundo, en una sociedad muy dinámica.
El curso combina objetivos comunicativos generales junto a otros de índole cultural que permitirán a los estudiantes desenvolverse y relacionarse en el contexto de la sociedad. También facilitará entender la sociedad, las instituciones y la organización empresarial, permitiendo una mejor adaptación a trabajar en entornos coreanos.
PRIMER CUATRIMESTRE A1-1 PARTE 3
- Del 22/09/23 al 16/02/23
- VIERNES DE 19 A 21H
- 16 sesiones 32 horas
- 208 euros
- Las clases se interrupirán por Navidad el día 15/12/23 (último día de clase).
- Se reanudarán el día 12/01/24 (primer día de clase).
ANOMALÍAS EN EL CALENDARIO:
- Viernes 13/10/23: descanso
- Viernes 10/11/23: descanso
Profesora:
La profesora nativa Hwang SeungOk, es licenciada en filología francesa y tiene un máster en formación de profesores de coreano como lengua extranjera. Fue pionera en la docencia del coreano, implantando los estudios oficiales de coreano en España en el año 1995 y es experta profesora en la enseñanza de este idioma para estudiantes hispanohablantes. Colaboradora de Casa Asia desde 2006.
IMPORTANTE:
NO se grabarán las sesiones del curso excepto de forma excepcional. En caso de grabarse, las grabaciones estarán disponibles online durante un máximo de 7 días, pasados los cuales, las grabaciones dejarán de estar disponibles en la nube y se borrarán automáticamente.
Será necesario asistir al 60% de las clases como mínimo indispensable para poder pasar de nivel, además de superar el examen de fin de trimestre.
En caso de no haber estudiado el nivel anterior (A1-1 Parte 2) en Casa Asia, será obligatorio realizar una prueba de nivel gratuita, que deberán solicitar enviando a idiomas@casaasia.es los siguientes datos:
- Nombre y apellidos
- Teléfono
- Toda la información posible sobre tu nivel actual de coreano: dónde has estudiado, con qué libros de texto, cuántos años, si has estado alguna vez estudiando en Corea, etc.
- ¿Tienes algún certificado de Topik?
- Horario preferido para la entrevista oral (Ej. Por la mañana, por la tarde cuanto antes / más tarde, [opciones detalladas], INDIFERENTE, etc.
Una vez recibidos los datos, te haremos llegar la información relativa a la prueba de nivel gratuita.
Materiales:
Material preparado por la docente. El material estará disponible en Google Classroom.
Todo el alumnado deberá disponer de una cuenta personal (no de institución/empresa) de Google (———-@gmail.com).
Más Información
- Horario: Del 22 de septiembre al 16 de febrero de 2024. Viernes de 19.00 h a 21.00 h. 16 sesiones de 2 horas: 32 horas en total.
- Lugar: Online. 24 horas antes del acto las personas inscritas recibirán la información necesaria para acceder. Comprueba tu bandeja de correo no deseado en caso de no haberla recibirlo.
- Precio: 208 euros.
- Organiza: Casa Asia
CURSOS ONLINE DE IDIOMA COREANO, CASA ASIA
El idioma coreano es la lengua oficial de Corea del Norte y del Sur. Hablado por casi 80 millones de personas, la escritura coreana (Hangeul) es un sistema fonológico de rápido aprendizaje creado por el rey Sejong el Grande durante el siglo XV para que su pueblo, frustrado por no poder expresar sus sentimientos mediante los caracteres chinos, pudiera leer y escribir fácilmente, con lo que el analfabetismo es prácticamente inexistente en Corea. El Hangeul es una escritura científica que fue seleccionada como “Patrimonio Cultural de Literatura” por la UNESCO en 1997.
El interés hacia Corea se ha incrementado paulatinamente con las telenovelas, el cine y la música (k-pop), conectándose con otros iconos más tradicionales como el Taekwondo (arte marcial que une la mente con el cuerpo), el Hanbok (vestido de diseño tradicional), el Kimchi (que representa su gastronomía saludable), el Hanji (la elegancia y durabilidad del papel de seda) o el Hanok (el sistema de calefacción bajo el suelo) y los productos tecnológicos coreanos. La Corea de hoy es el reflejo de una transformación constante, a la vez que una capacidad para conservar sus raíces más profundas. La capacidad de innovación de su población la ha colocado entre las primeras economías desarrolladas del mundo, en una sociedad muy dinámica.
Los cursos combinan objetivos comunicativos generales junto a otros de índole cultural que permitirán a los estudiantes desenvolverse y relacionarse en el contexto de la sociedad. También facilitará entender la sociedad, las instituciones y la organización empresarial, permitiendo una mejor adaptación a trabajar en entornos coreanos.
Consulta los distintos niveles que ofrecemos:

Viernes de 17.00 h a 19.00 h CEST
22/09/2023 – 16/02/2024

Viernes de 19.00 h a 21.00 h CEST
22/09/2023 – 16/02/2024
Profesora:
La profesora nativa Hwang SeungOk, es licenciada en filología francesa y tiene un máster en formación de profesores de coreano como lengua extranjera. Fue pionera en la docencia del coreano, implantando los estudios oficiales de coreano en España en el año 1995 y es experta profesora en la enseñanza de este idioma para estudiantes hispanohablantes. Colaboradora de Casa Asia desde 2006.
Más información:
- Horario: consultar para cada curso
- Lugar: Online.
- Precio: Consultar cursos y precios.
- Organiza: Casa Asia
CFP: “NEOLIBERAL ASIA AND ITS PRECARIOUS OTHERS”, 2023 SITUATIONS INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE
“Neoliberal Asia and Its Precarious Others”,
2023 Situations International Conference
October 20-21, Grand Hyatt Jeju, South Korea
The modern history of Asia has been characterized by rapid and even spectacular growth, as societies that were poor and agrarian became prosperous and advanced through the process of state-led development. But the much-vaunted successes of the developmental state have often served to conceal intractable problems and troubling realities. The neoliberal economic model has exacerbated inequalities across the globe, and Asia has not been spared the pernicious dynamic whereby a few have achieved tremendous wealth while many more have fallen out of the middle class and are confronted with an increasingly gloomy and uncertain future. Precarity has driven these issues to the fore, as the loss of faith in the future has come to unsettle and weaken social cohesion in Asia just as it has dissolved it across the West.
This conference examines the experience of precarity in Asia, past and present. Whether it relates to contract laborers working without benefits, migrants seeking low-wage jobs, the physically handicapped cut off from steady employment, the neuro-diverse negotiating the rules of corporate culture, or gays and lesbians carving out a niche in a traditional society, Situations welcomes papers from a wide variety of perspectives taking on these and other issues related to the worsening instability of social structures and the spread of uncertainty in traditionally communitarian Asian societies. How have members of marginal or disenfranchised groups responded to the predicaments of precarity, and how are views of these groups changing among the general public? What kind of politics are emerging in response to mass disillusionment regarding a better future, and what kind of influence are disenfranchised groups beginning to exert against the forces arrayed against them? Could precarity also provide opportunities for marginalized groups that did not exist in the past?
Invited Speakers:
- Dr. Rey Chow (Duke University)
- “Democracy or Totalitarianism? Terms of the New Cold War”
- “Thresholds of Precarity”
- Dr. Youngmin Choe (USC)
- “The Viscous Return of the Rheol”
Possible topics might include:
- labor and precarity
- disability rights
- migrant workers in Asia
- precarity and the shaping of biopolitics
- the crisis of the low birth-rate
- the emergence of neuro-diversity (such as Extraordinary Attorney Woo)
- the transformation of family life
- gender identity in uncertain times
- cults as a phenomenon of precarity
- Squid Game and other metaphors of precarity
- environmental politics and the loss of the future
- precarity and the experience of deep time
- the impact of the Old and the New Cold War
- lives under authoritarian regimes
Early inquiries with 200-word abstracts are appreciated. By 20 August 2023, we would invite you to submit your 4,000-word Chicago-format conference presentation with its abstract and keywords (the acceptance of the presentation will be decided based on the 4,000-paper). Each invited participant will then be expected to turn his or her conference presentation into a finished 6,000-word paper for possible inclusion in a future issue of the SCOPUS-indexed journal, Situations: Cultural Studies in the Asian Context. All inquiries and submissions should be sent to both situations@yonsei.ac.kr and skrhee@yonsei.ac.kr.
Submissions should follow the Chicago Manual of Style (16th ed.), using only endnotes.
Venue: Grand Hyatt Jeju
Notes:
We will pay the hotel accommodation for those participants whose final papers we accept. The presenters will share twin bedrooms.
Contact Info:
situations@yonsei.ac.kr; skrhee@yonsei.ac.kr.
Contact Email:
situations@yonsei.ac.kr
ÚLTIMAS PUBLICACIONES ACADÉMICAS 2023 (II)
En este segundo trimestre del año, descubrimos algunas investigaciones académicas que han sido publicadas a nivel internacional durante estos últimos meses de 2023. Avances publicados en formato libro que abarcan distintas áreas de las Ciencias Sociales y Humanidades con un punto de partida en común: Corea. Descubre cuáles son las publicaciones que ya se encuentran a la venta para su inmediata adquisición.
PERSPECTIVES ON CONTEMPORARY KOREA SUMMER INSTITUTE

Perspectives on Contemporary Korea
Summer Institute
Theme: The Global Korean War
Dates: June 25-July 1, 2023
Location: Ann Arbor Campus
Program Overview
The Nam Center for Korean Studies at the University of Michigan is announcing the inaugural Perspectives on Contemporary Korea Summer Institute, to be held in Ann Arbor from June 25-July 1, 2023. Graduate students at any level whose research concerns Korea are encouraged to apply. Preference will be given to students pursuing a doctoral degree. In this one-week, residential intensive program, students will participate in collaborative learning, collective thinking, and interdisciplinary agenda-setting around a key critical issue central to Korean Studies. Two leading scholars will be joining students in residence and directing in-person seminars for participants.
In the summer of 2023, the theme of the institute will be the Global Korean War. A formative event of the twentieth century, the Korean War was not a single war but a combination of several kinds of related conflicts: a civil war between mutually negating postcolonial political forces, a global conflict waged between major power blocs with competing visions of modernity, and, increasingly after 1950, a war fought between the American “superpower” and a fledgling revolutionary state of the People’s Republic of China. The Summer Institute will be devoted to exploring key issues in established and emerging scholarship on the Korean War. Particular attention will be paid to contextualizing classical perspectives in relation to successive waves of revisions enabled by the opening of previously unavailable archives on the one hand, and by the recognition of subjectivities and experiences hitherto unseen, unacknowledged, or marginalized, on the other.
This summer, the two scholars who will be joining the Summer Institute as faculty instructors are:
Heonik Kwon is a Senior Research Fellow in Social Science and Distinguished Research Professor of Social Anthropology at Trinity College, University of Cambridge. He is a Fellow of the British Academy, uniquely on the Academy’s three separate subject fields of Anthropology, Asian Studies and Modern History. Author of prizewinning books on the Vietnam War social history and on Asia's postcolonial Cold War experience (The Other Cold War, 2010), Kwon's other publications include North Korea: Beyond Charismatic Politics (2012), After the Korean War: An Intimate History (Cambridge, 2020), and Spirit Power: Politics and Religion in Korea's American Century (2022).
Steven Lee is Associate Professor of History and former chair of the international relations program at the University of British Columbia. His publications include Outposts of Empire: Korea, Vietnam and the Origins of the Cold War, 1949-1954 (1996), The Korean War (2001), and Transformations in Twentieth Century Korea, co-edited with Yunshik Chang (2006). He has coedited a volume of The Journal of American-East Asian Relations on the theme of the two Koreas in the 1950s (2017), and has written articles on the history of Korean refugees, Canada-Korean Relations, and the role of the UN in Korea. He is currently writing a global history of the twentieth century for Blackwell-Wiley.
Applications
All applications should be submitted using this form.
Interested students should prepare and submit the following documents, in addition to one confidential letter of recommendation from a faculty member from the institution where the student is currently enrolled, preferably the applicant’s advisor:
- A Letter of Intent of no more than two pages describing current scholarly interests and how participation in the Summer Institute would contribute to the applicant’s academic plans. The statement should include information about courses taken in relevant fields if any.
- A current curriculum vitae
- A sample of recent writing
Letters of recommendation should be submitted by the advisor in pdf format to ncks.applications@umich.edu with “SUMMER INSTITUTE - Letter of Recommendation” in the subject line.
The final deadline for all submissions is April 9, 2023 at 11:59 pm.
Admissions decisions will be announced within the month of April.
Tuition & Financial Aid
Tuition is waived for all participants in the institute. Lodging will be provided to participants, as well as a modest stipend for meals and incidental expenses, with the generous support of the Academy of Korean Studies.
Students are encouraged to seek funding from their home institutions for transportation to Ann Arbor.
The Summer Institute is supported by the Strategic Research Institute Program for Korean Studies of the Ministry of Education of the Republic of Korea and the Korean Studies Promotion Service at the Academy of Korean Studies (AKS-2021-SRI- 2200001).
CFP: THE KOREAN PENINSULA, A MULTIDISCIPLINARY PERSPECTIVE, INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM
The Korean Peninsula, A Multidisciplinary Perspective. International Symposium
June 21-22, 2023 The Bar-Ilan University (hybrid)
Last year (2022) the Korean Studies conference commemorated 60 years of diplomatic relations between the Republic of Korea and some Middle Eastern countries, including Israel. This year, the conference’s focus will be on the Korean Peninsula from a multidisciplinary perspective.
The security threat from the North that South Korea is dealing with, considered to be a major topic in the field of Korean Studies in Israel for many years. To broaden the discussion, the 2023 Korean conference will include other challenges and themes that both Koreas face, including (but not limited):
- The demographical challenges, solutions, and obstacles South Korea faces in the last few years. Is it an obstacle at all?
- The economic policy. How should the government, financial and industrial sectors adapt to the new global changes? What is the role of China in these economic changes?
- Cultural aspects. President Yoon Suk-yeol declared that he will invest three billion dollars in South Korean culture. How should Korea balance its investments in culture? Should we change our soft power perspective in the coming years?
- Historical preservation. What efforts and aspects of preservation are taking place in contemporary Korea? How should Korea's historical assets be presented to the public?
- The security challenges. The new North Korean drone incident and the debate on how South Korea should develop its own nuclear capabilities, raise questions about South Korea's defense policy.
- The influence of populism in the Korean political arena. Political discourse, and the use of social media.
- Historical narratives between Korea and its neighbors.
Asian Studies at Bar-Ilan University invite scholars from the humanities and the social sciences to discuss these issues. To offer new perspectives on these issues, and or other relevant themes that concern Korea (North and South). We will also invite comparison discussion between Korea and other global cases.
Individual presenters may submit an abstract of 300 words and a one-paragraph short CV. For panel proposals, please submit a one-page proposal and a short CV of the speakers. Email the information or if you have any questions to Dr. Alon Levkowitz (alon.levkowitz@biu.ac.il) by April 1, 2023.
Successful applicants will be notified by April 15, 2023.
On the evening of June 21st, we will host an opening dinner for all participants. Conformation of attendance is required. The conference panels will take place on June 22 at the Bar-Ilan University campus.
Participants are required to secure their own travel and accommodation arrangements. Limited hotel rooms will be offered for overseas participants. If you wish to be granted accommodation, please mention it in your proposal. Conference Organizers: Dr. Alon Levkowitz and Dr. Michal Zelcer-Lavid, Asian Studies, Bar-Ilan University
For questions regarding the conference, please contact Dr. Alon Levkowitz alon.levkowitz@biu.ac.il.
This conference is supported by the 2022 Korean Studies Seed Program of the Academy of Korean Studies (AKS-2022-INC-2230013) and the Dangoor Centre.
WEBINAR CASA ASIA: COREA EN EL NUEVO SISTEMA DE RELACIONES INTERNACIONALES
Corea en el nuevo sistema de relaciones internacionales,
Webinar Casa Asia
Con el objetivo de mostrar la proyección internacional de Corea se analizará la participación coreana en la nueva configuración de las relaciones intergubernamentales, determinada por el ascenso de China y por la política exterior estadounidense. Se recurrirá a tres espacios geográficos clave: en la península de Corea, mostrando la divergencia creciente de los objetivos de los gobiernos del Norte y del Sur; en Asia del Este, analizando el acercamiento necesario con Japón y, en la región del Pacífico, la tensión ejercida por tener a China como primer socio comercial y a Estados Unidos como garante de la seguridad.
Palabras de bienvenida:
- Rafael Bueno, director de Política, Sociedad y Programas Educativos, Casa Asia
Presenta:
Modera:
Conferencia a cargo de:
Biodata del conferenciante:
Juan José Ramírez Bonilla es doctor en desarrollo económico y social por la Universidad de Paris-I, Panthéon-Sorbonne; desde 1993, es profesor-investigador adscrito al Centro de Estudios de Asia y África de El Colegio de México; sus líneas de investigación son “Desarrollo económico y social en Asia del Pacifico” y “Procesos de integración económica en la región del Pacífico”. Entre sus publicaciones recientes destacan: La República de Corea ante la influencia de la administración Trump (El Colegio de México, 2020) y 60º Aniversario de la relación Corea-México. Evaluación y objetivos futuros (Embajada de la República de Corea en México, 2021).
Más información:
- Fecha: Jueves 23 de marzo de 18.00 h a 19.30 h CET
- Lugar: Online. 24 horas antes del acto las personas inscritas recibirán la información necesaria para acceder. Comprueba tu bandeja de correo no deseado en caso de no haberla recibirlo.
- Precio: Actividad gratuita.
- Organiza: Máster Oficial en Estudios Globales de Asia Oriental de la Universidad Autónoma de Barcelona (UAB) y Casa Asia, con la colaboración del Grupo de Investigación GREGAL (UAB)
- Inscripción: enlace
CONFERENCIA CASA ASIA: LA GEOPOLÍTICA EN EL INDOPACÍFICO Y LA POSICIÓN DE COREA
La geopolítica en el Indopacífico y la posición de Corea,
Conferencia Casa Asia
La política exterior coreana ha dado un giro importante con el presidente Yon Seuk-yeol. Este giro se ha traducido en una mejora de las relaciones con Japón, una mayor aproximación a EEUU, sobre todo en el terreno de la seguridad, y una relación más matizada con China. En esta conferencia se tratarán los aspectos clave de la estrategia de este país asiático para el Indopacífico, con especial atención a la preocupación por la amenaza norcoreana y el protagonismo de las cuestiones de seguridad.
Presenta y modera:
- Emilio de Miguel, embajador en misión especial para el Indopacífico y director del Centro Casa Asia-Madrid.
Conferencia a cargo de:
- María Castillo, embajadora de la Unión Europea para la República de Corea.
- Ramón Pacheco, catedrático de Relaciones Internacionales en el King’s College de Londres, y titular de la Cátedra KF-VUB de Corea en la Brussels School of Governance de la Universidad Libre de Bruselas (intervención online)
Más información:
- Fecha: Jueves 16 de marzo de 18.00 h a 19.00 h CET
- Lugar: Centro Casa Asia-Madrid. Calle Mayor, 69. Madrid
- Precio: Actividad gratuita previa inscripción.
- Organiza: Casa Asia
- Inscripción: enlace
CFP: VIRTUAL WRITING WORKSHOP FOR GRADUATE/EARLY-CAREER RESEARCHES

“Changing dynamics of gender, family, and relationships in South Korea”,
Virtual Writing Workshop for Graduate/Early-Career Researchers
We warmly invite graduate and early-career scholars from around the world who are qualitatively researching gender, family, and relationships in South Korea to a one-day virtual workshop on 1st August 2023. The goal of the workshop is to provide an opportunity for participants to share their research-in-progress and to give and receive constructive feedback on each others’ works (circulated in advance) as well as to network with like-minded people in similar stages of their academic career working on closely related topics.
While we are open to applications working on any topic relating to gender, family, and relationships in South Korea informed by a feminist perspective and using qualitative data and methodologies, we particularly welcome those focusing on the following areas/themes:
- Marriage, childbearing, and parenting
- Children's perspectives and experiences
- Romance, friendship, and intimate relationships
- Alternative arrangements of care beyond the nuclear family and heterosexuality
Please send in your abstract of up to 500 words, including a preliminary title, topic, research question, methodology and the main argument by 15th March 2023. Participants whose abstracts are selected will need to send their writing by 14th July 2023 for circulation. You will have the opportunity to submit your work either as an extended abstract (around 3000 words including a motivation of the study, description of the analytic approach, and preliminary results) or a full paper (up to 9000 words including abstract, references, tables, footnotes, etc.), depending on the current stage of your research.
At the workshop, participants will give a 5-10 minute recap of their work. As our workshop aims to provide a friendly and constructive environment in which to develop ideas and work, all participants are expected to read and provide constructive and thoughtful feedback on the submission of a few other participants. Participants are also welcome to give comments on the other works based on presentations.
If you are unsure whether your research fits the scope of our workshop, we would recommend you to apply in the first instance. We hope to be as accommodating and inclusive as possible in selecting a diverse range of interesting topics and researchers from various backgrounds. In case you have any inquiries, please feel more than free to get in touch with the co-organizers. We are more than happy to answer any questions or simply to connect and learn about your research.
Key deadlines and details:
- Deadline for abstracts: 15th March 2023 Wednesday
- Deadline for full papers / extended abstracts: 14th July 2023 Friday
- Workshop date: 1st August 2023 Tuesday (time TBC)
About the co-organizers:
Youngcho Lee (she/her) is an ESRC postdoctoral fellow at the London School of Economics, Department of Social Policy. Youngcho is interested in the intersections of gender, work/family, and social policy and her research focuses primarily on caregiving fathers in South Korea and their uptake of parental leave. Youngcho received her PhD in Sociology at the University of Cambridge with joint funding from the Cambridge Trust and Murray Edwards College. Email Youngcho at: y.lee28@lse.ac.uk
Meera Choi (she/her) is a sociology Ph.D. candidate at Yale University. Meera’s research investigates the micro- and meso-level gender inequality that shapes cultural meanings of intimacy, care, and family formation in contemporary South Korea. Currently, she is working on a dissertation project that examines shifting heterosexual desires of South Korean women in light of the sexual violence and safety discourses since the #MeToo movement. Email Meera at: meera.choi@yale.edu
*Youngcho and Meera first met in an online workshop during the pandemic and since then have developed and maintained a close friendship. We are organizing this workshop to expand our network and hope the workshop will provide a platform for all participants to find peers and future collaborators in a friendly setting.
Contact Info:
Youngcho Lee: y.lee28@lse.ac.uk & Meera Choi: meera.choi@yale.edu
Contact Email:
y.lee28@lse.ac.uk
CURSO ONLINE CASA ASIA DE IDIOMA COREANO
Curso online Casa Asia
de idioma coreano
El idioma coreano es la lengua oficial de Corea del Norte y del Sur. Hablado por casi 80 millones de personas, la escritura coreana (Hangeul) es un sistema fonológico de rápido aprendizaje creado por el rey Sejong el Grande durante el siglo XV para que su pueblo, frustrado por no poder expresar sus sentimientos mediante los caracteres chinos, pudiera leer y escribir fácilmente, con lo que el analfabetismo es prácticamente inexistente en Corea. El Hangeul es una escritura científica que fue seleccionada como “Patrimonio Cultural de Literatura” por la UNESCO en 1997.
El interés hacia Corea se ha incrementado paulatinamente con las telenovelas, el cine y la música (k-pop), conectándose con otros iconos más tradicionales como el Taekwondo (arte marcial que une la mente con el cuerpo), el Hanbok (vestido de diseño tradicional), el Kimchi (que representa su gastronomía saludable), el Hanji (la elegancia y durabilidad del papel de seda) o el Hanok (el sistema de calefacción bajo el suelo) y los productos tecnológicos coreanos. La Corea de hoy es el reflejo de una transformación constante, a la vez que una capacidad para conservar sus raíces más profundas. La capacidad de innovación de su población la ha colocado entre las primeras economías desarrolladas del mundo, en una sociedad muy dinámica.
Los cursos combinan objetivos comunicativos generales junto a otros de índole cultural que permitirán a los estudiantes desenvolverse y relacionarse en el contexto de la sociedad. También facilitará entender la sociedad, las instituciones y la organización empresarial, permitiendo una mejor adaptación a trabajar en entornos coreanos.
Consulta los distintos niveles que ofrecemos:

Curso online «Idioma coreano y su entorno socioeconómico (nivel A1-1 – parte 3)»
- Viernes de 17.00 h a 19.00 h CET
- 24/02/2023 – 30/06/2023

Curso online «Idioma coreano y su entorno socioeconómico (nivel A1-1 – parte 2)»
- Viernes de 19.00 h a 21.00 h CET
- 24/02/2023 – 30/06/2023
Profesora:
La profesora nativa Hwang SeungOk, es licenciada en filología francesa y tiene un máster en formación de profesores de coreano como lengua extranjera. Fue pionera en la docencia del coreano, implantando los estudios oficiales de coreano en España en el año 1995 y es experta profesora en la enseñanza de este idioma para estudiantes hispanohablantes. Colaboradora de Casa Asia desde 2006.
CFP: DIVERSE PERSPECTIVES WORKSHOP; BELONGING IN SOUTH AND NORTH KOREAN POPULAR CULTURE
Belonging in South and North Korean popular culture: diverse perspectives Workshop
Universität Hamburg, Asien-Afrika-Institut, Korean studies, August 30th-31st 2023
The categories of nation and nationalism have been major terms under which the construction of belonging has been explored, especially in earlier film studies. Looking at North and South Korean popular culture, the construction of a sense of belonging is diverse. While there have already been some contributions to gender or ideology and propaganda, other representations of the sense of belonging such as to region, nature, physical or social characteristics of communities are still scarce. The cause for diversity might also be based on the different development within the two states. What are the contexts to a certain sense of belonging? What are the modes of representation?
The conference can be attended on site or online. One night accommodation with half-board will be provided by the organiser. Selected papers will be published in a collected volume after the workshop.
Deadline for abstracts (200 – 300 words): February 15th 2023
For further requests, please contact Prof. Dr. Yvonne Schulz Zinda: yvonne.schulz.zinda@uni-hamburg.de
CFP: ASIAN APPROACHES TO URBAN CHALLENGES CONFERENCE
Asian Approaches to Urban Challenges Conference: Insight for the Public and Policy Makers
The University of San Francisco Center for Asia Pacific Studies is pleased to announce a call for papers for “Asian Approaches to Urban Challenges: Insight for the Public and Policy Makers,” a conference to be held at the University of San Francisco on Friday, April 21, 2023.
With this conference, the Center aims to promote research and academic discussion on issues related to Asian approaches to contemporary urban issues. This year we will be focusing on pressing issues of urbanization in 21st-century East Asia (China, Japan, Korea, Taiwan) and their implications for policy in the United States. Our goal is to cultivate a discussion across the Pacific region on these important matters that have deep ramifications for US policy makers and public welfare.
Proposed themes include:
- accessibility
- carceral and penal policy
- children and schooling
- city diplomacy
- commerce and tourism
- crime and policing
- drug policy
- food
- environmental issues
- housing/homelessness
- immigration
- public health and hygiene
- public transportation
- race and ethnicity
- waste management
All participants will be required to provide a draft of their conference paper at least 2 weeks prior to the conference (by Thurs., April 6, 2023) to allow discussants adequate time to prepare their comments. Papers must represent original work not already published or in press. Each presenter will have 25 minutes to present their work.
The Center will provide lodging and food for presenters during the duration of the conference. Participants are expected to cover the costs of their travel to and from the university. We have limited funds to assist a small number of participants with their airfare. Please indicate in your proposal if you are also applying for the travel grant to cover these costs.
Participants will be invited to submit their paper for consideration in the Center’s online, indexed, double-blind peer-reviewed academic journal, Asia Pacific Perspectives (ISSN: 2167-1699). Since its establishment in 2001, the journal has promoted cross-cultural understanding, tolerance, and the dissemination of knowledge about the Asia Pacific region. The journal is free and easily accessible on the web. For more information, visit this link.
The USF Center for Asia Pacific Studies is San Francisco’s academic gateway to the Asia Pacific, promoting teaching, public programs, and research on the peoples and cultures of region. The Center regularly organizes and presents academic symposia and conferences on topics related to the history, culture, and politics of the Asia Pacific region and has earned a reputation for hosting well-organized, interesting events that draw in diverse audiences. Please see the Center’s brochure or visit our website for more information about our work.
To Apply:
Deadline: Application review will begin on Wednesday, Feb. 1, 2023, and continue until all panels are filled.
Interested applicants should email the following to centerasiapacific@usfca.edu, subject line, “Asian Approaches to Urban Challenges”.
- 300 word (maximum) proposals for a 25-minute paper presentation
- Short biography
Please share this call with any scholars that may be interested.
Contact for Questions:
Melissa S. Dale, Ph.D.
Executive Director & Assistant Professor
centerasiapacific@usfca.edu
CFP: "CREATIVE KOREA: EXPLORING CONTEMPORARY KOREAN CULTURAL INDUSTRIES AND CULTURAL PRODUCTION" CONFERENCE
“Creative Korea: Exploring Contemporary Korean Cultural Industries
and Cultural Production” Conference
Conference Dates: 4 and 5 May 2023
Venue: Department of Arts, University of Bologna, Bologna (Italy)
Deadline for proposals: 29 January 2023
Result notification: 15 February 2023
In recent years, Korean cultural industries have established themselves as among the most dynamic and successful at the global level, both artistically and commercially. Supported by a series of worldwide successes, the Korean Wave has become one key example of non-Western cultural production that was able to engage global audiences, to influence the way in which they consume pop culture and to adapt to the transformative changes brought by new social and digital media technologies.
The conference will focus on exploring the different aspects of contemporary Korean cultural production, with an inter-disciplinary and multi-disciplinary perspective, including the many different sectors that compose the Korean Wave:
- Film and TV Production
- Music
- Performing Arts
- Visual Art
- Comics and Graphic Novels
- Webtoons
- Animation
- Videogames and E-Sports
- Fashion and Food
The aim is to analyze the multiple factors that have made this growth possible, the specific characteristics of cultural industries and cultural production in Korea, the different influences that shaped this production, the socio-political and economic effects and impact of the spread of Korean cultural products both inside and outside Korea.
SUBMISSIONS should include an ABSTRACT (300 words) and a SHORT BIO (100 words) and be sent to CREATIVEKOREA2023@GMAIL.COM before 29 January 2023.
Proposals from PhD students, early career researchers and independent scholars are welcome.
Publication plan: at the end of the conference, we will look for an opportunity to publish an edited volume.
Enquiries can be directed to: Dr. Mary Lou Emberti Gialloreti, University of Bologna, marylou.emberti@unibo.it
The event is funded by the Academy of Korean Studies. (AKS-2021-INC-2230003)
CFP: "DISABILITY'S HIDDEN TWIN: DISCOURSES OF CARE AND DEPENDENCY IN LITERATURE", EDITED VOLUME
“Disability’s Hidden Twin: Discourses of Care and Dependency in Literature”,
edited volume of critical essays
We are calling for abstracts for papers examining Anglophone imaginative literature (precluding memoirs) that engages in some fashion with care ethics and disability theory. We are seeking a range of representation from different eras and regions.
The title of the volume comes from Jennifer Natalya Fink, who writes that “[c]are work is the hidden twin of disability.”[1] And yet, the relationship between carers and cared-fors is vexed. The question of care is controversial for many disabled self-advocates, who view the practice of caregiving with profound suspicion, since care has frequently been a site of oppression for disabled people, both in institutional and home environments. Yet care is necessary for the survival of people who are dependent on others for dressing, bathing, hygiene, transportation, nutrition, and social interaction. Care relations are also controversial inasmuch as family members, frequently female, are time and again forced into the position of caretaker without training or renumeration, and paid caregivers are often migrants from the global south or lower socioeconomic backgrounds who must leave behind their own cared-fors. How has imaginative literature parsed this relationship? What texts give us insights into disabled cared-fors’ need for agency, or caregivers’ feelings about their charges, or the quality of the relationship between them?
Anglophone literary texts from different periods and regions might demonstrate historically alternative practices and expectations regarding the care relationship. We are particularly interested in representations of care in Indigenous, global, African American, Latinx, and Asian culture, and in eras that predate modern medical professionalism, and we look forward to analysis that draws out the gendered and sexual elements of care. We are also interested in the structure of the care community as it develops in literature against the heteronormative couple and the nuclear family, and look forward to submissions that identify and parse care communities and collectives in literature.
Abstracts of approximately 350 words should be submitted as a word document to Chris Gabbard at cgabbard@unf.edu by January 31, 2023. A CV or bio should be included.
Initial selections will be based on the abstract and will be announced no later than April 3, 2023. The deadline for full papers (6,000-8,000 words) is January 5, 2024. Papers will be subject to peer review.
The volume editors are in conversation with series editors at the University of Michigan Press (Corporealities: Discourses of Disability) and Routledge (Interdisciplinary Disability Studies).
[1] Jennifer Natalya Fink, All Our Families: Disability Lineage and the Future of Kinship, Beacon Press, 2022.
cgabbard@unf.edu
Chris Gabbard
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