[KS] Publication announcement: The Journal of Korean Studies Fall 2023 issue (issue 28.2)

Davey, Jack daveyja at email.gwu.edu
Mon Oct 23 08:33:18 EDT 2023


Dear Colleagues,

The GW Institute for Korean Studies at the George Washington University is
pleased to announce the publication of the Journal of Korean Studies Fall
2023 special thematic issue: “Time Divide, Gender Divide: Gender, Work, and
Family in South Korea” guest edited by Youngjoo Cha and Seung-Kyung Kim.

The articles are available online through read.dukeupress.edu and Project
MUSE, including for individuals not affiliated with a subscribing
institution.


The Journal of Korean Studies is dedicated to publishing quality articles
in all disciplines on a broad range of topics concerning Korea, both
historical and contemporary. JKS encourages transnational and
interdisciplinary approaches to scholarship.

JKS welcomes submissions year round for publication in the spring issue.
For more information please visit <https://www.dukeupress.edu/journal-of-
korean-studies/> https://www.dukeupress.edu/journal-of-korean-studies/



The Journal of Korean Studies, Fall 2023, Volume 28, No. 2



Special Thematic Issue: Time Divide, Gender Divide: Gender, Work, and
Family in South Korea guest edited by Youngjoo Cha and Seung-Kyung Kim



*Special issue articles*



Time Divide, Gender Divide: Gender, Work and Family in South Korea by
Youngjoo Cha and Seung-kyung Kim



Gender Differences in Daily Time Use: Trends and Educational Differentials
by Hyunjoon Park



Shadow Labor in Care Services: Why Do South Korean Women Care Workers Work
Such Long Hours and Get Paid So Little? By Joohee Lee



Education, Employment, Family Formation Behaviors, and the Gender Health
Gap: A Cross-National Comparison of Korea, the United States, and Finland
by Hyeyoung Woo, Lindsey Wilkinson, and Soo-Yeon Yoon



*General articles*



Courtesans in Military Uniforms: Martial Spectacles by Cross-dressing
Courtesans of Ŭiju

in the Late Chosŏn Period by Hyun Suk Park



Must Be Willing to Travel: Linguistic (Im)mobility and the Transformation
of Korean Language in Ch’ae Mansik’s Late Colonial Literature by Mi-Ryong
Shim



*Book Reviews*



*Spirit Power: Politics and Religion in Korea’s American Century *by Heonik
Kwon and Jun Hwan Park*. *Reviewed by Sandra Park



*Cine-mobility: Twentieth-Century Transformations in Korea’s Film and
Transportation* by Hansang Kim. Reviewed by Soonyoung Lee
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