Korean History Symposium: Toward a Postnationalist History of Korea (HYBRID)

Discipline : History
Speaker(s) : Organizers: Yumi Moon (Stanford University), Sungik Yang (Arizona State University), and Sun Joo Kim (Harvard University)
Language : English

time zone will be applied.

Report this post?

Original time zone : 2024-09-13 9:00 Eastern Standard Time(EST) (America/New_York)
My local time zone : 2024-09-13 9:00 ()
posted by Nadja Nielsen


image



Date: Friday, September 13, 2024, 9:00am to 5:30pm

Location: Reading Room, Harvard Faculty Club, 20 Quincy Street, Cambridge, MA 02138


Workshops and Conferences

  • Co-sponsored by the Department of East Asian Languages and Civilizations
  • Organizers: Yumi Moon (Stanford University), Sungik Yang (Arizona State University), and Sun Joo Kim (Harvard University)


9:00am – 9:45am: Opening Remarks

  • Nicholas Harkness, Modern Korean Economy and Society Professor of Anthropology; Director, Korea Institute, Harvard University
  • Melissa McCormick, Department Chair, East Asian Languages and Civilizations; Andrew W. Mellon Professor of Japanese Art and Culture, Harvard College Professor, Harvard University
  • Sean Dorrance Kelly, Dean of Arts and Humanities; Teresa G. and Ferdinand F. Martignetti Professor of Philosophy, Harvard University
  • Lawrence D. Bobo, W. E. B. Du Bois Professor of the Social Sciences; Dean of the Division of Social Sciences, Harvard University
  • Eun Mee Kim, President of Ewha Womans University


9:45am – 10:00am: Break


10:00am – 12:00pm: Panel I: Mobility, Ideology, and Transnational Korea

Moderator: Si Nae Park (Harvard University)

Discussants: Hyung-Gu Lynn (The University of British Columbia) and Kirk Larsen (Brigham Young University)

  • Ilsoo Cho (Kyujanggak Institute for Korean Studies, Seoul National University), “Decentering the King of Chosŏn: Early Muromachi Wars in Northern Kyushu and the Maritime “Korean World Order””
  • Yumi Moon (Stanford University), “Northern Refugees and the Rise of Cold War Nationalism in South Korea, 1945-1949.”
  • Michael Kim (Yonsei University), “Collaboration and Assimilation within Japan’s Multi-ethnic Empire: Uniting the “Eight Corners of the World Under One Roof” in Colonial Korea”
  • Sungik Yang (Arizona State University), “From the Third Way to Third Worldism: Anti-Western and Antiliberal Internationalism in Postcolonial Korea”


12:00pm – 1:00pm: Lunch


1:00pm – 3:00pm: Panel 2: Markets, Rural Society, and Postwar Capitalism in Korea

Moderator: Sun Joo Kim (Harvard University)

Discussants: Tae Yang Kwak (Ramapo College of New Jersey) and Tae Gyun Park (Seoul National University)

  • Sujin Han (Harvard University), “A Druggist’s Account: Rural Healthcare in South Korea.”
  • Will Sack (Harvard University), “A White Revolution in South Korea: 4-H, Greenhouses, and the Rural Bourgeoisie”
  • Anna Lee (University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign), “Rethinking Markets: Governing Traditional Markets in Modern South Korea”
  • Peter Kwon (University at Albany, SUNY), “The “K-Defense” (K-Pangsan) Effect: Park Chung Hee, Defense Industrialization, and South Korea’s Quest from Client State to Global Pivotal Power”


3:00pm – 3:15pm: Break


3:15pm – 5:15pm: Panel 3: Religion, Culture, and Kinship in Modern Korea

Moderator: Nicholas Harkness (Harvard University)

Discussants: Christine Kim (Georgetown University) and Kyu Hyun Kim (University of California, Davis)

  • Chong Bum Kim (University of Central Missouri), “Between Nation and Empire: The Anglican Church in Colonial Korea”
  • Motokazu Matsutani (Tohoku Gakuin University), “Christian Connections between P’yŏngyang and Sendai: Soongsil College and Tohoku Gakuin in the 1920s and 1930s”
  • Ellie Choi (Brown University), “Northern Bourgeois Subjectivity and Korea’s First Modern Landscapes”
  • Nuri Kim (University of Cambridge), “Genealogies of Misinformation: Claiming and Contesting Clan Membership in Modern Korea”


5:15pm – 5:30pm: Closing Remarks by Carter J. Eckert


***

To attend this online event, please register here.


Generously supported by the SBS Foundation Research Fund at the Korea Institute, Harvard University


Information from website; click here

Next     
List     
   0          
--> --> Like 0