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DATE: Tuesday. November 25, 2025. 7:20PM (Seoul)
VENUE: Seoul Public Activities Center (SPAC, 서울시공익활동지원센터). ‘다목적홀’
(ADDRESS: Basement Floor, 40 Baekbeomro 99-gil, Yongsan Verdium Friends(용산베르디움프렌즈) #101, Yongsan-gu, Seoul), 2-3 minutes walking from Exit 8 of Samgakji-Station (Line 6 & Line 4)
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SUMMARY:
With the outbreak of the Korean War, the primary mechanism for conveying personal goods of American military personnel was the Transporter, a leftover from World War II, and the CONEX (Container Express) box, a predecessor to the more recent ISO shipping container. This form of conveyance transformed port cities such as Incheon and Busan from their recent history as part of Japanese empire (1910-1945). The subsequent “success story” of the ISO container, often told as a story of European shipping, or alternatively, American trucking, remains heavily embedded within a wartime context, in this case, the period preceding and leading up to American involvement in Vietnam (1965). A Los Angeles architectural firm, DMJM (Daniel, Mann, Johnson and Mendenhall) helped to design plans for Vietnamese ports in the early 1960s, helping to ease the transition from French colonialism. With the commitment to Vietnam, break-bulk shipping, with goods handled by teams of stevedores, needed to be replaced by containerization, especially at intake sites such as Cam Ranh Bay, one of the major intake points for goods.
As a corollary to this rapid development of logistics, the Asian subcontractors involved in this process borrowed and used this technology while participating in Vietnam but also while transforming their own domestic ports. This paper tracks the Korean firm, Hanjin, and its use of the technology in Vietnam (Qui Nhon, Cam Rahn), along with the migration of the technology to Busan by the early 1970s. Other actors, such as Lusteveco (Luzon Stevedore Co, Philippines), had similar opportunities, with distinct results, and the goal here is to place Korean firms within a larger network of military and commercial logistics.
BIO:
John P. DiMoia is Professor of Korean History at Seoul National University (SNU). He is the author of Reconstructing Bodies (2013, Stanford / WEAI), and one of the co-editors of Engineering Asia (Bloomsbury 2018 / WEAI). His current project in progress is titled “Peace and Construction”: Korean Developmentalism, Built Environment, and Southeast Asia, 1954-present, and seeks to link Korean overseas work culture, construction projects, and labor policies to Southeast Asia beginning in the mid to late 1950s (under contract, University of Hawaii Press) through the history of KODCO (Korean Overseas Development Corporation, or 한국해외개발공사).
VENUE:
The Seoul Public Activities Center(SPAC, 서울시공익활동지원센터) is located at Yongsan Verdium Friends #101 (용산베르디움프렌즈 101동) B1, 40 Baekbeomro 99-gil, Yongsan-gu, Seoul. Walk 2-3 minutes from ‘Exit 8’ of Samgakji Station (LINE 6 & 4) and take the elevator down to the B1 Floor.