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
CFP: "RADICAL HISTORIES OF DECOLONIZATION", RADICAL HISTORY REVIEW
- 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)?
- 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)
CFP: VERGE ISSUE 12.1 STUDIES IN GLOBAL ASIA
CFP: "GUEST-WORKERS OF THE WORLD" 5TH EUROPEAN LABOUR HISTORY NETWORK CONFERENCE
- 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)
CFP: “GENDER AND MARRIAGE MIGRATION IN ASIA AND EUROPE: WHY DO INTEGRATION MEASURES TARGET WOMEN?”, CENTER FOR MIGRATION LAW RADBOUD UNIVERSITY CONFERENCE
- 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?
- 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.
- Deadline for Abstracts: 26 May 2023
- Information on selection: 14 June 2023
- Submission of full draft papers: 1 September 2023
CFP: PRÓXIMO VOLUMEN 12(2), OMNES: THE JOURNAL OF MULTICULTURAL SOCIETY
- A blinded manuscript without any authors’ names and affiliations in the text,
- a cover letter,
- authors’ checklist, and
- a copy of the plagiarism check result (less than 10%). Authors’ checklist can be downloaded from our website.
CFP: 2022 SITUATIONS INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE FOR GRADUATE STUDENTS
- 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
CFP: MIGRATION METHODOLOGIES: CHALLENGES, INNOVATIONS AND CONCEPTUAL IMPLICATIONS FOR ASIAN MIGRATIONS
- 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?
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
CFP: GLOBAL MOBILITY HUMANITIES CONFERENCE 2019 (GMHC 2019) AT ACADEMY OF MOBILITY HUMANITIES
at Academy of Mobility Humanities, Konkuk University
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
CFP: "ASIAN-PACIFIC AND WORLD ORDER: SECURITY, ECONOMICS, IDENTITY AND BEYOND", CONFERENCE
CFP: "NORTH KOREA AND COMMUNICATION", ICA PRE-CONFERENCE 2019
CFP: III ENCUENTRO IBEROAMERICANO DE ESTUDIOS COREANOS: NUEVOS PARADIGMAS EN LA JUVENTUD COREANA
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.














