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ÚLTIMAS PUBLICACIONES ACADÉMICAS 2024



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.

CFP: "NATURAL HISTORY", SPECIAL ISSUE, CROSSROAD JOURNAL VOL 23.2


“Natural History”, Special Issue,

Crossroads Journal Vol. 23.2.


The early modern world was not only a world of increasing interconnectivity in terms of trades and travels, but fostered a systematic exploration of hitherto unknown territories and peoples, constituting the birth hour of all kinds of 'natural histories.'

In our forthcoming issue of Crossroads, 23.2, we plan a special issue on 'natural history' and the transfer of plants, (ethno-)botanical, geological, and (ethno-)medicinal knowledge across the Asian Pacific and Indian Ocean worlds, 16th to early 19th centuries. We intend particularly to stress 'science migration' between Asian and European agents and the exploration and examination of Asian flora, and their local biological, (ethno-)medicinal, and geological environments by European travelers.

The range of topics shall also include studies on exchanges of material objects (plants, minerals, books, instruments, etc.), on the transplantation of certain plants, the setting up of botanical gardens, the use of special herbs and plants in local food cultures or medicinal practices, and/or the compilation of special 'natural histories'.

Authors who are interested in submitting a paper to this special issue should submit their papers through our online tool linked below, indicating/marking it as "Special Issue: Natural History". Otherwise, our general submission guidelines apply.

Online submission: Articles for publication in Crossroads can be submitted online through Editorial Manager. To submit an article, follow this link: Editorial Manager®.

Please visit the journal's home page at Crossroads | Brill.


Contact Information


Associate Editor, Asian Studies

Brill USA

Contact Email: stephanie.carta@brill.com



CFP: "RADICAL HISTORIES OF DECOLONIZATION", RADICAL HISTORY REVIEW


“Radical Histories of Decolonization”,



Radical History Review seeks contributions for a special issue entitled “Radical Histories of Decolonization.

Historians have tended to treat decolonization as an event that began in the 1940s and ended by the late 1970s, primarily confined to large areas of Asia and Africa, though scholars of global Indigenous histories offer a deeper and unfinished timeline. Many activists today use the term to discuss a still-present need to end colonial institutions, from settler colonial occupation in places as widespread as Turtle Island (North America), Hawai’i, Puerto Rico, Palestine, and Aotearoa (New Zealand), to the hegemony of Western thought in university curricula, to the possession of art and artifacts expropriated from the colonies and displayed in museums in major cities such as New York, London, and Paris. The term “decolonization” has come to mean many things, some limited, and others expansive.

This issue of the Radical History Review seeks to explore the genealogy of decolonization as a category of analysis and how people have dreamed and enacted decolonization in past and present. We are interested in work that reconsiders how decolonization has occurred—as both success and failure—throughout history, including in geographic areas that fall outside of the twentieth-century paradigm including Haiti and many parts of Latin America that press into the twenty-first century. We are interested in questions of how the colonized in overseas colonies, settler colonies, and informal colonies understood decolonization across different times and spaces. While the works of individual thinkers (Fanon, Cabral, Césaire, Nehru, Ho Chi Minh) tend to dominate histories of decolonization, we ask how people on the ground who are often left out of the story—including but not limited to women, soldiers, and ethnic and linguistic minorities—challenged colonial power and the dominant parties fighting for sovereignty. This issue aims to center the work of scholars, activists, and archives that lay outside of Western institutions.

Potential topics include (but are not limited to):
  • While the etymology of decolonization begins in the nineteenth century, how is it useful for historians of the ancient or medieval worlds to work with this concept?
  • What happens when anti-colonial movements have interacted with and taken up imperial imaginaries of an idealized pre-colonial past?
  • How have people across the political spectrum interpreted (and perhaps instrumentalized) decolonization differently?
  • Where does the concept of Indigeneity fit into histories of decolonization?
  • Is decolonization a concept that can be understood universally? Or does it always need to be rooted in local struggles?
  • What does history tell us about the relationship between decolonization and sovereignty?
  • How do we understand the rise of religious, social, and political movements in the context of decolonization?
  • How does the framework of decolonization work (or not work) in contexts of informal colonial or “semi-colonial” relations?
  • Does decolonization mean the end of empire and/or has decolonization meant the end of empire? Historically, how have colonized subjects imagined and attempted to enact an end to empires?
  • How does decolonization work as a language outside of the context of Western European imperialism (i.e. Japanese empire, Russian empire)?
The RHR publishes material in a variety of forms. Potential contributors are encouraged to look at recent issues for examples of both conventional and non-conventional forms of scholarship. We are especially interested in submissions that use images as well as texts and encourage materials with strong visual content. In addition to monographic articles based on archival research, we encourage submissions to our various departments, including:
  • Historians at Work (reflective essays by practitioners in academic and non-academic settings that engage with questions of professional practice)
  • Teaching Radical History (syllabi and commentary on teaching)
  • Public History (essays on historical commemoration and the politics of the past)
  • Interviews (proposals for interviews with scholars, activists, and others)
  • (Re)Views (review essays on history in all media—print, film, and digital)
  • Reflections (Short critical commentaries)
  • Forums (debates and discussions)
Procedures for submission of articles:

By January 8, 2024, please submit a 1-2 page abstract summarizing the article you wish to submit to our online journal management system, ScholarOne. To begin with ScholarOne, sign in or create an account at here. Next, sign in, select “Author” from the menu up top, and click “Begin Submission” or “Start New Submission.” Upload a Word or PDF document, including any images within the document. After uploading your file, select “Proposal” as the submission type and follow the on-screen instructions. Please write to contactrhr@gmail.com if you encounter any technical difficulties.

By February 29, 2024, authors will be notified whether they should submit a full version of their article for peer review. The due date for completed articles will be in June, 2024. Those articles selected for publication after the peer review process will be included in issue 153 of the Radical History Review, scheduled to appear in October, 2025.

Abstract Deadline: January 8, 2024

Contact: contactrhr@gmail.com

CFP: VERGE ISSUE 12.1 STUDIES IN GLOBAL ASIA


Verge Issue 12.1: Studies in Global Asia

“Trade in Humans”


A PDF of this call is available here. Please direct all questions to verge@psu.edu.

Trade in humans is a vast and age-old engine of migration between regions in the Asia-Pacific and, since the sixteenth century, from Asia to the Americas, Africa, and Europe. This special issue of Verge seeks to illuminate both the ubiquity of the trade in Asian people and its particularities across time and space. Indispensable to both Asian polities and Western empires, to nation-building in the Americas and to the development of global capitalism, Asians as agents and objects of trade in humans also formed the core of Asian diasporas and hybridized cultures worldwide. Such circulation of Asian persons and labor profoundly influenced the formation of our modern world.

In documenting the widespread trade in Asian people, scholars have been divided on whether to call it a slave trade, with some identifying cases that clearly fit the term, while others eschew it in favor of a range of alternatives. Asian languages offer many relevant terms – such as人身売買 [Japanese for “buying and selling human bodies”] or sŏnsang nobi 選上奴婢 [Korean for “slaves selected and sent up to the capital”] – for practices that may not map neatly onto Western legal and cultural categories.

We use the term “trade in humans” in hope that this issue will engage with a broad scope of historical and contemporary forms of commodification, sale, alienation, and forced migration of Asian people. Rather than presume the forms and limits of exploitation, we seek to open up a conversation across fields and terminological silos. Topics explored may potentially range from slave trading to adoption, child marriage, resettlement, trafficking, indentured labor, “coolietude,” and military conscription.

This special issue will attend to problems of translation and the texture of human experience undergirding linguistic, legal, political, and cultural attempts to represent or obfuscate the transregional trade in humans. We seek contributions from a wide variety of fields: Asian studies and Asian American studies, history, legal studies, sociology, anthropology, and diaspora studies, among others. We welcome contributions that explore the influence of these diverse trades across all Asian regions, the Americas, and beyond, as well as local or international legacies.


Convergence Feature Proposals

One of Verge: Studies in Global Asias’ distinctive features is an opening section called Convergence, where we curate a rotating series of rubrics that emphasize collaborative intellectual engagement and exchange. Each issue features several of the following rubrics: A&Q, a responsive dialogue, either in interview or roundtable format, inspired by a set of questions; Codex, a collaborative discussion and assessment of books, films, or exhibits; Translation, for texts, primary or secondary, not yet available in English; Field Trip, reports from various subfields of the disciplines; Portfolio, commentaries on visual images; and Interface, texts exploring the resources of the print-digital world. We welcome those interested in these features to submit a Convergence proposal for the issue.

Proposals should be 1–2 pages in length and indicate what kind of feature is being proposed; demonstrate an awareness of the formats utilized by the journal; include an abstract and, if collaborative, a list of proposed contributors; and include a short (2 pg) cv.

The Convergence proposals deadline is March 15, 2024; however, we encourage those interested in submitting a proposal to contact the editors about their ideas in advance of this date. Please direct all inquiries and submissions to verge@psu.edu.


Essay Submissions

Essays (between 6,000-10,000 words) and abstracts (125 words) should be submitted electronically through this submission form by August 30, 2024 and prepared according to the author-date + bibliography format of the Chicago Manual of Style. See section 2.38 of the University of Minnesota Press style guide or chapter 15 of the Chicago Manual of Style Online for additional formatting information.

Authors’ names should not appear on manuscripts; instead, please include a separate document with the author’s name, address, institutional affiliations, and the title of the article with your electronic submission. Authors should not refer to themselves in the first person in the submitted text or notes if such references would identify them; any necessary references to the author’s previous work, for example, should be in the third person.

CFP: "GUEST-WORKERS OF THE WORLD" 5TH EUROPEAN LABOUR HISTORY NETWORK CONFERENCE


“Guest-workers of the World”, Uppsala, 11-13 June 2024

5th European Labour History Network (ELHN) Conference


ELHN’s “Labour Migration History” working group invites proposals for papers for the Fifth European Labour History Network conference. The event takes place from 11–13 June 2024 in Uppsala, Sweden, and is organised by the Swedish Labour Movement’s Archives and Library.

So-called guest-workers programs spread out in many transnational contexts during and after the Second World War through agreements that involved various actors at the national and transnational levels. Much has been done in relation to specific cases, but we aim to bring together the different historical context in which they were developed to draft a picture of guest-worker programs at the global level. We are looking for papers about labor programs established under binational agreements in the period 1942-1973 in any world region.

Empirical works related to this topic are welcome by colleagues of any career level. We invite colleagues working on guest-worker programs from various regions in Asia, Africa, Europe, and the Americas to submit abstracts that addresses one or more of the following themes (but not limited to):
  • process of recruitment and establishing of processing centers;
  • process of mobility and sites of immobilization;
  • negotiation between states;
  • labor contract’s condition under the binational agreement;
  • coercion, indebtment, discriminations and racialization;
  • protests, self-organization of guest-workers and connection with unions;
  • deportation and repatriation;
  • workers’ perspective of life and working conditions abroad;
  • cultures of mobility;
  • national identity making through the guest-worker program;
  • relation between the program and economic transformations (i.e. agrarian reforms, displacement, extractivism, etc)
We are looking for proposals for individual papers of max. 300 words. They should include your name, current affiliation, email address, an indication of whether they are participating onsite or online, and be sent to the coordinating committee by September 5, 2023.


For further questions, please contact the coordination committee:

Claudia Bernardi: claudia.bernardi@unipg.it

Anna Batzeli: abatzeli3@gmail.com

CFP: “GENDER AND MARRIAGE MIGRATION IN ASIA AND EUROPE: WHY DO INTEGRATION MEASURES TARGET WOMEN?”, CENTER FOR MIGRATION LAW RADBOUD UNIVERSITY CONFERENCE


“Gender and marriage migration in Asia and Europe: why do integration measures target women?”,

Center for Migration Law, Faculty of Law Radboud University, Nijmegen

Conference 28 and 29 September 2023


In much of the academic literature, integration measures are framed as a more or less recent phenomenon that can be found in western liberal democracies. (Western) comparative studies regarding integration requirements focus on laws and policies applied in Europe (see, for instance, Goodman 2010, Scholten et al. 2012, Strik et al 2010, Strik et al. 2013, Van Oers 2014). However, such integration measures are also common in other parts of the world, most notably in Asia (see Chiu & Yeoh 2021 for an overview). Within and from this region, marriage migration has been on the rise for the last five decades, eliciting regulatory attention in both sending and receiving countries (Fresnoza-Flot & Ricordeau 2017; Ishii 2016; Kim et al. 2021; Mu & Yeung 2022). This interdisciplinary seminar aims to provide key insights into states' regulatory mechanisms surrounding marriage migration and their gendered dimensions in Asia and Europe in comparative perspective.

Such a comparison is fruitful because in both regions, 1) integration measures are generally targeting family migrants; 2) marriage migration is a highly gendered phenomenon, as most marriage migrants are women, whose rights to remain depend on their husbands or partners (Chiu & Yeoh 2021: 881); and 3) although states in Asia and Europe may have different perspectives of statehood and nationhood, in both regions migration regimes have become increasingly restrictive and family migration has become highly problematized.

As a result, in both the European and Asian contexts, migrant women are the main targets of integration measures. In the Asian context, female marriage migrants are assumed to take on mainly reproductive familial roles; they are depicted as 'deficit' mothers incapable of nurturing their (citizen) children and forming a threat to the nation's population quality (Chiu & Choi 2019, Chiu & Yeoh 2021: 885). In the European context too, marriage migration is seen as 'importing' unemancipated and uneducated wives who are bound to make 'bad mothers' (Bonjour & Kraler 2015; Bonjour & de Hart 2013; Kofman et al. 2011; Muller Myrdahl 2010). Narratives based on this gendered problematization have become institutionalized, found their way into the mission statements of NGOs focusing on the emancipation of female migrants from ethnic communities, and presumably into the curricula of the integration programmes offered to marriage migrants. However, most studies on integration seem to fail to take gender into account, thereby ignoring how central gendered discourses have been in the development and implementation of integration policies (Kofman 2022).

We invite theoretical and empirical papers from different disciplines that may relate to, but are not limited to, the following issues:
  • State integration policies and the power of gender: How gendered are integration policies in migrant receiving countries in Europe and Asia? To what extent do such policies reflect and/or reinforce the gender ideologies and norms in the countries concerned? How does the gender dimension of integration policies evolve through time and why? How do integration policies portray, represent, or view migrant women? Which specific figure (e.g., single women, mothers, nationals from economically developing countries, ...) of migrant women has been the focus of these policies and why? What forms of femininities are valorized, devalued, or challenged in this process? How do the countries of origin of migrant women react to, challenge, or align their migration policies vis-à-vis the integration policies of their citizens' receiving countries?
  • The integration policies are developed in a political and geographical context in which power hierarchies of race/ethnicity, gender, and class are central. How have state laws and policies shaped identities of gender, intersecting with 'race' and 'ethnicity' in developing and justifying integration measures? How was it determined who had to integrate and who not and how can this be analysed from a critical postcolonial or decolonial and gender perspective?
  • The role of non-state and private actors in the multi-level governance of integration measures. The state policies under discussion are often implemented at the local level, e.g. by municipalities and NGOs, but also private companies such as language institutes or matrimonial agencies, developing course materials and offering courses. How and in what ways is the curriculum of integration tests and courses informed by gendered ideologies of gender, nation and motherhood? What role do (feminist) NGOs play in integration programs and integration narratives targeting female family migration?
  • Agency of female marriage migrants. How have integration measures impacted the sense of belonging of female family migrants? How have they benefited from them? How do family migrants and activists respond to integration measures? How do they negotiate the different social dynamics and power relations ingrained in integration policies? How have they challenged or resisted the host state's patriarchal integration projects and calmed the power to define themselves?
We intend to stimulate an interdisciplinary, thematic approach in researching the role of gender in integration policies and practices in comparative perspective. The call is therefore aimed at researchers from Asia and Europe and from various academic backgrounds. To list some but not all:
  • Legal scholars in the field of migration law;
  • Migration scholars from various other disciplines such as history, social sciences, political science, etc. researching immigrant integration or inclusion policies;
  • Researchers at any stage of their career are welcome;
  • Theoretical, empirical and/or legal/normative studies are welcome; and
  • Both national studies and comparative studies are welcome.
Paper abstracts should be about 400 words in length and include the following information: a title, a summary (aim, central question, methods, key findings), and a short biography of the author(s).

Please send your abstract to: dr. Ricky van Oers (ricky.vanoers@ru.nl). A selection of the presented papers will be part of a Special Issue for a peer reviewed international journal.
  • Deadline for Abstracts: 26 May 2023
  • Information on selection: 14 June 2023
  • Submission of full draft papers: 1 September 2023
Please note that we will ask the participants to present and comment each other's papers. Timely submission of the full papers is, therefore, a must.


The seminar will take place on 28 and 29 September 2023 at the Centre for Migration Law of the Radboud University in Nijmegen, the Netherlands. For those who are unable to attend the meeting, a possibility to join online will be provided. Contact Ricky van Oers (ricky.vanoers@ru.nl) for questions regarding the covering of travel expenses.


Organisers:

Dr. Ricky van Oers (Radboud University): ricky.vanoers@ru.nl


Dr. Asuncion Fresnoza-Flot (Université libre de Bruxelles, Belgium): asuncion.fresnoza@ulb.be


This seminar has received funding from the Standing Committee "Gender and Sexuality in Migration Research" (GenSeM) of IMISCOE.

CFP: PRÓXIMO VOLUMEN 12(2), OMNES: THE JOURNAL OF MULTICULTURAL SOCIETY



ISSN: 2093-5498 (Print) / 2671-969X (Online)


We are currently accepting manuscripts for OMNES: The Journal of Multicultural Society Vol.12 No.2 that will be published on July 31, 2022. To be considered for the upcoming issue, OMNES 12(1), please submit your manuscript by April 30, 2022.


About the Journal

OMNES, meaning “everyone” in Latin, is a peer-reviewed biannual publication. We welcome manuscripts that deal with themes concerning the global movement of people, human security related to migration, multicultural or multiracial society, cultural diversity, refugees, social integration, nationalism, culture, identity, civil rights and other relevant topics. We are seeking an interdisciplinary approach in the area of politics, economy, society, culture, language, literature, history, philosophy, and the arts.

OMNES publishes rigorous theoretical or empirical research papers, review articles, book reviews. The editors invite submissions from researchers in all fields of social science and humanities.

OMNES is indexed and abstracted in Korea Citation Index (KCI) as of 2016.


Contributor’s Guide

Deadline: April 30, 2022

Date of Publication: July 31, 2022

Subject area: General topics within the scope of OMNES

Manuscript style: The 6th edition of the APA Style

Submission: Submissions should be made via e-mail (omnes@sookmyung.ac.kr) or submission system.

Authors are requested to submit four files: 
  1. A blinded manuscript without any authors’ names and affiliations in the text,
  2. a cover letter, 
  3. authors’ checklist, and
  4. a copy of the plagiarism check result (less than 10%). Authors’ checklist can be downloaded from our website.

Contact & Further Information

For further details, please contact the managing editor at omnes@sookmyung.ac.kr.

Details are available on our website.

Please refer to the Notes for Contributors for specific information.


Contact Email:

omnes@sookmyung.ac.kr.




CFP: 2022 SITUATIONS INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE FOR GRADUATE STUDENTS




2022 Situations International Conference for Graduate Students

Antagonism in Asia: The Fault-lines of Conflict in an Interdependent World

Jan. 28 -29, 2022 Venue: Online Zoom


It has been commonly thought that bringing the peoples of the world together through free trade and communications technology would create the prosperity that would in turn reduce conflicts between nations and between ethnic and racial groups. Instead, war and uprisings have plunged much of the Middle East into Chaos, while geopolitical rivalry has intensified between the two superpowers, the US and China. Furious and impassioned protests against China over an extradition law erupted in Hong Kong in 2019. Taiwan has sought to strengthen its ties to the US out of mounting fears of a military invasion from the mainland. Ethnic and religious conflicts have come to the forefront in Myanmar, where the crisis over the Rohingya people was a factor in both the country’s decision to ally with China and the coup that toppled its democratically-elected government.

We are looking for papers dealing with literary and cinematic representations of conflict — ideological, ethnic, racial, religious, or even sexual — in Asia. How have fiction writers and filmmakers dealt with this emerging landscape of conflict? What do efforts to grapple with the historical legacies of violence and atrocity, such as the Sino-Japanese War, the Pacific War, the Korean War, the Vietnam War, or the massacres in Indonesia under Suharto, reveal about contemporary global and regional predicaments?

Some possible topics:
  • The rise of China as a world power
  • The meaning of communism in an age of global markets
  • The legacies of the Cold War
  • Migrant labor in Asia
  • A Pan-Asian future: utopian or realistic?
  • Inter-ethnic tensions in Southeast Asia
  • The war on terror in Asia
  • The Chinese Cultural Revolution and the West
  • Views of Imperial Japan across Asia
  • The Vietnam War reconsidered
  • Feminism, gay rights, and geopolitics
  • Religious persecution in Asia

Early inquires with 200 word abstracts are appreciated. We invite you to submit 4,000 word essays with abstracts by January 17, 2022. All correspondence should be sent to bk21eng-edit@yonsei.ac.kr.

Submissions should follow the Chicago Manual of Style (16th ed.), using only endnotes. For further details about the citation protocols, refer to our journal website.


Contact Email: 

bk21eng-edit@yonsei.ac.kr


CFP: MIGRATION METHODOLOGIES: CHALLENGES, INNOVATIONS AND CONCEPTUAL IMPLICATIONS FOR ASIAN MIGRATIONS


Migration Methodologies:

Challenges, Innovations and Conceptual Implications for Asian Migrations


Migration flows of unprecedented volume and complexity within, as well as in and out of Asia have become one of the main drivers of contemporary social change in the region. Major travel restrictions and curtailments in recent months brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic have further raised severe concerns over the potential impacts and implications of ongoing curbs. In these contexts, approaches to studying international migration have highlighted the institutions, infrastructures, processes, practices, consequences and experiences of migration while attending to its multi-directional, multi-sited, multi-causal and open-ended nature. New spatialities and temporalities – from transnational families, mobile cities, diaspora-and-development, global care chains, contact zones, spaces of encounter, travel bubbles/corridors/sandbox to multinational migrations – have animated migration research as material borders and socially constructed boundary lines are transgressed, rigidified or redrawn in the face of multiple-, hyper- and transnational migrations and mobilities.

In view of the increasing conceptual breadth and theoretical sophistication of international migration scholarship, it follows that our research practices need to evolve to embrace the quickened pace of mobilities and the heightened sense of transience, simultaneity and otherness experienced by the migrant (and non-migrant) subject within interlocking lifeworlds. As Collins and Huang (2012, p.270) observe, contemporary migration scholarship “draws on a wide range of research methodologies, reflecting the multi-disciplinary character of the field, the diverse sites and subjects of migration, and the varied concepts and theories that underpin this area of study”. These methodologies have broadened to include computational, quantitative, qualitative and mixed-method approaches and techniques as exemplified by the use of longitudinal surveys, sequence analysis, social networks analysis; mental mapping, multi-sited ethnographies, go-along ethnography, visual ethnography, life-story interviews, paired/unpaired interviews, participatory methods and data visualization techniques (Büscher, Urry, and Witchger, 2010; Amelina and Faist, 2012; Meeus, 2012; Martiniello, 2017; Fauser, 2018; Ryan and D’Angelo, 2018).

Despite “all this methodological development, innovation and cross-fertilisation” within the scholarship on migration, the discipline has – to date – failed to fully explore, interrogate, review and compare the merit and design of such methods (Collins and Huang, 2012, p.270). The authors continue to argue that there has also been limited “reflection on the ethical and conceptual implications of these choices” (Collins and Huang, 2010, p.270). This workshop responds to their observation by providing a collaborative forum to bring together migration scholars with diverse methodological interests and expertise.

We invite papers that focus on innovative methodological approaches while drawing on substantive findings relevant to “Asian migrations” (broadly defined to refer to migration flows within, as well as in and out of Asia) in order to grapple with the challenges and possibilities in conducting migration research. Contextually grounded papers that pursue one or more of the following questions are particularly welcome:
  • How do we research new migration-led spatialities and temporalities in (im)mobile times across interconnected worlds and/or during a pandemic?
  • How do we work with multi-directionality, multi-causality and provisionality in contemporary migrations? How do we map multinational migrations over time and space?
  • What kinds of methodological routes can be pursued to go beyond the single case in migration research and to seriously contemplate multi-sited research, develop comparative transnational frameworks, increase awareness of the connectivities across scales and units of analysis, and instill wariness of methodological nationalism?
  • How do we equip ourselves for the task of boundary-crossing, a task which goes hand in hand with supporting a socially progressive migration agenda?
  • How do we devise research practices that would contribute towards dismantling institutionalized practices which reproduce racisms, nationalisms and social privilege, and pave the way for a more inclusive approach in our work as migration researchers?
  • How has the “new (pandemic-)normal” featuring lockdowns, immobilities and restricted human interactions altered our ways of conducting research and reshaped existing conceptualizations of migration?

Submission of Proposals:

Paper proposals should include a title, an abstract (300 words maximum) and a brief personal biography of 150 words for submission. Please use the paper proposal form and send it in doc/docx format to Ms Rohini Anant at rohini.a@nus.edu.sg by 15 September 2021.

Please also include a statement confirming that your paper has not been published previously, it is not committed elsewhere, and that you are willing to revise your paper for potential inclusion in a special issue submission (in collaboration with the workshop organizers and other participants).

Successful applicants will be notified by end of September. Panel presenters will be required to submit drafts of papers (4,000-7,000) words by 20 December 2021. These drafts will be circulated to fellow panelists and organizers in advance.


Convenors:

Professor Brenda Yeoh






Professor Elspeth Graham



Associate Professor Lucy Jordan



Contact Info:

Ms Rohini Anant at rohini.a@nus.edu.sg


Contact Email: 

arios@nus.edu.sg

CFP: BETWEEN ASIA AND EUROPE: WHITHER COMPARATIVE CULTURAL STUDIES?


Between Asia and Europe: 

Whither Comparative Cultural Studies?

(Hybrid Online/Offline Conference) 

University of Ljubljana, Ljubljana, Slovenia May 21-22, 2021


Due to the circumstances of COVID-19, the conference is rescheduled for May 21-22, 2021, and it will be a combination of online and offline event. The deadline for your 4,000-word proposal, which includes a 100-word bio statement and a 150-word abstract, is April 15, 2021

Asia and Europe have long been recognized as the source for the majority of the religions and philosophies, the ideologies and worldviews, the aesthetic styles and fashions, that served to shape classical antiquity and prepared the way for the coming of the modern age. At times, this relationship has been seen as the site of mutual benefit. At the turn of the twentieth century, for example, comparative historians drew attention to the manner in which the lure of new industrial or scientific potential helped to elevate Asia, just as Europe opened itself up to new philosophies of architecture, art and dress. At other times, the two continents have been seen as rivals, two potentially hostile sites of power and influence. In this respect, the War in the Pacific became shorthand for a military, ideological and philosophical enmity.

As the second decade of the twenty-first century dawns, the shifting currents of global power suggest that either of these relationships may well gain come to dominate our medium-term future. It is now widely perceived that many of the dominant economic and political formations in the industrialized world—summed up in the dual regime of neoliberal globalization and liberal democracy—find themselves in an unprecedented crisis of legitimacy, and new relationships and configurations of power seem poised to emerge.

Given this context, what kind of insights might we gain about our current predicament by revisiting the origins of modernity? Alternately, how might an investigation of some of the roads not taken or the values dismissed as backwards and impractical reveal?

In the age of globalization, what points of contact between European and Asian texts have proven to be the most fruitful and significant? Alternatively, what are the ways in which Asians and Europeans have continued to misunderstand and misrepresent each other—how have Orientalism and Occidentalism changed in the present era?

What are the areas of affinity and convergence in the cultures of the Old World that have been overlooked in a global culture which is still very much dominated by the values and outlooks of the New World, i.e. the United States?

Finally, what aspects of European or Asian culture might serve as the basis for new ways of living and thinking in a future in which the economy, the environment, and the composition of national populations may well differ dramatically from the present?


We encourage submissions that take a comparative approach to the study of texts from Asia and Europe.


Possible topics include:

  • Art cinema then and now
  • Political philosophy East and West
  • Patterns of migration flow in and between Europe and Asia
  • Asian values and European traditions
  • Mysticism and spirituality in a global age
  • The reception of Western philosophy and literature in Asia
  • Religious violence and terrorism
  • Ethnic strife in Europe and Asia
  • The legacies of communism at the end of neoliberalism
  • Climate disruption across the continents
  • Trade routes: from the Silk Road to the Belt and Road project
  • The literatures and cultures of Eurasia
  • The legacies of the Second World War: the Axis Powers and Asia
  • Land and sea: the changing geopolitical landscape
  • Ruins and monuments: the persistence of antiquity
  • Pan-Asianism and the project of European unity
  • Nationalism and populism in Europe and Asia
  • The future of cultural and national identities
  • Espionage and culture
  • Tourist writing


Keynote speakers:

Dr. Anindya Raychaudhuri (University of St Andrews) “Marxist Memories: British Communists, Colonial India and Reading Imperial History through Anti-Imperial Autobiography

Dr. Nissim Otmazgin (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem) “A New Cultural Geography of Eurasia? Building New Silk Roads through Popular Culture

Dr. Sowon S Park (UC Santa Barbara) “When a Jesuit Missionary from Slovenia met an astronomer from Korea in 18th C Beijing

Dr. Alexander Des Forges (University of Massachusetts-Boston) “Involution as Style and Structure.


Early inquiries with 200-word abstracts are appreciated, although the deadline for a 4,000-word proposal, which includes a 100-word bio statement and a 150-word abstract, is April 15, 2021. All correspondence should be addressed to the Editor of Situations, Terence Murphy, at tmurphy@yonsei.ac.kr and cc’d to the Managing Editor Rhee Suk Koo at skrhee@yonsei.ac.kr.

Each invited participant is expected to turn his or her initial 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. More information


We will provide accommodation for each invited speaker. We look forward to welcoming you to Ljubljana, Slovenia!


Co-hosted by East Asia Resource Library, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia and the Department of English Language and Literature BK21 Project, Yonsei University, Korea.

CFP: NORTH KOREAN CULTURE AND CINEMA


Situations: Cultural Studies in the Asian Context Fall 2020 Issue
The Personal and the Political in Contemporary North Korean Culture and Cinema


We invite submissions of full-length essays on the important but largely understudied topic of “North Korean Culture and Cinema” for the September 2020 issue. The existing studies on North Korean cinema have mainly focused on the ideological role of the cinema as a propaganda tool of the state. Given the rapidly changing circumstances of North Korea under Kim Jong-un’s leadership and his ongoing attempts to reform and open the regime, however, we seek to illuminate North Korean cinema from a broader set of perspectives, including thematic, formal and technical approaches to the topic as well as its relationship with other artistic forms and emergent technologies. This special issue will feature articles from the following scholars, and we anticipate that many other scholars will be interested in taking part in this important unfolding scholarly debate.

CFP: GLOBAL MOBILITY HUMANITIES CONFERENCE 2019 (GMHC 2019) AT ACADEMY OF MOBILITY HUMANITIES


Global Mobility Humanities Conference 2019 (GMHC 2019)
at Academy of Mobility Humanities, Konkuk University
25th October 2019. Seoul, South Korea

Following the establishment of the Academy of Mobility Humanities in May 2018, the organizers invite proposals for whole panels or individual papers for 2019 Global Mobility Humanities Conference (GMHC). This conference is organized by the Academy of Mobility Humanities (Konkuk University), Kritika Kultura (Ateneo de Manila University), and UNITAS (University of Santo Tomas).

CFP: "NATIONAL IDENTITIES AND THE YOUTH IN EAST ASIA: POPULAR CULTURE, POLITICAL MOBILISATION, AND DIGITAL SPACES" WORKSHOP




National Identities and the Youth in East Asia: 
Popular Culture, Political Mobilisation, and Digital Spaces
Workshop at the Université libre de Bruxelles, Belgium, 2-3 May 2019

As East Asian societies seek to come to term with demographic, economic, political and technological transitions in recent decades, the younger generation – the so-called Millennials born after 1980 –  have been both impacted by and assuming an increasingly active role in shaping these transformations. Despite being frequently depicted as a politically apathetic generation and with only limited access to traditional levers of state and cultural power, the youth in East Asia have been able to negotiate their political identities through a variety of channels outside official institutions such as popular culture, social and political activisms, and online communications. Digital spaces have become a particularly significant venue for the technologically sophisticated youth to engage in explicit or disguised forms of mobilisations and self-expressions as a strategy to, for instance, resist authoritarian control or to cope with social isolation. On the other hand, from the umbrella movement in Hong Kong and the sunflower movement in Taiwan to emerging feminist activisms in mainland China despite heightened oppressions, the youth are also increasingly involved in claiming the physical public space and in some cases utilising digital networks as a tool for real-world mobilisations. 

CFP: "ASIAN-PACIFIC AND WORLD ORDER: SECURITY, ECONOMICS, IDENTITY AND BEYOND", CONFERENCE



"Asia-Pacific and World Order: Security, Economics, Identity and Beyond" International 
Studies Association Asia-Pacific Regional Conference 2019

The rise of populism and authoritarianism worldwide has caused friction to established orders and tested institutional strengths. In the Asia-Pacific the increasingly potent competition between major powers poses significant challenges to the stability and security of states and societies. The region has also witnessed the realignment and restructuring of middle powers’ alliances and foreign policies. The rising politicization of diaspora has affected domestic politics across the region. Competition in the South China Sea has the potential to fracture the status quo regionalism in Southeast Asia and create new coalitions and clubs of states. Climate change and disasters can make or break governments in the Asia-Pacific. Cyber-security has highlighted a new theatre of international security discourse. 

CFP: "NORTH KOREA AND COMMUNICATION", ICA PRE-CONFERENCE 2019




North Korea and Communication
ICA Pre-Conference at Hilton Washington DC
May 24, 2019

North Korea has been an under-explored area in communication research. Limitations on movement and communication, as well as physical isolation of the country in the global arena, has made it difficult for scholars to produce meaningful research about North Korea. In recent years, however, there have been major developments in the communication infrastructure, with the introduction of cellular phones to the general public, resulting in over 70% of Pyongyang citizens having access. Foreign correspondents from the US, Europe and South Korea have been allowed to set up permanent foreign bureaus. In 2018, the North Korean leader has engaged in fast-paced diplomacy with the US, South Korea and China. Taken together, these changes are leading to a new era in communication about, within and around North Korea.

CFP: III ENCUENTRO IBEROAMERICANO DE ESTUDIOS COREANOS: NUEVOS PARADIGMAS EN LA JUVENTUD COREANA




La Universidad de Málaga se complace en anunciar la aceptación de abstracts para la participación en el “III Encuentro Iberoamericano de Estudios Coreanos: Nuevos Paradigmas en la Juventud Coreana" y que se celebrará del día 28 al 29 de Marzo de 2019.

La globalización e internacionalización han dejado un fuerte impacto en la sociedad coreana. A pesar de ser procesos con una larga historia, se han articulado bajo dichos términos parte del discurso político reciente de Corea del Sur. La presente conferencia quiere considerar los efectos que la globalización y la internacionalización han tenido en la nueva articulación de la educación y las identidades culturales entre los jóvenes coreanos, a la vez que analiza también las estrategias de localización que las han hecho posibles. Específicamente, quiere considerar los efectos de la movilidad transnacional en la articulación y rearticulación de identidades colectivas y culturales entre los jóvenes coreanos.

ÚLTIMAS PUBLICACIONES ACADÉMICAS 2018 (II)





Continuamos con el listado de las últimas investigaciones de académicos internacionales que han sido publicadas en formato de libro a lo largo de los últimos meses de 2018. Centrados en las distintas áreas de las Ciencias Sociales y Humanidades, ponen a disposición de quien quiera adquirirlos, una visión en profundidad de la península coreana a través de diferentes ámbitos de conocimiento.