[KS] Acta Koreana Vol. 13, No. 1 Publication Announcement

Michael Finch mcefinch at yahoo.co.uk
Tue Jun 15 02:30:01 EDT 2010


Dear KS List members,

Academia Koreana, the Korean studies research institute of Keimyung University, is pleased to announce the publication of Acta Koreana Vol. 13, No. 1, a theme issue on Korea-Japan relations, the table of contents of which may be found at the foot of this e-mail. 

Acta Koreana is an English language, refereed journal that is registered with the Korea Research Foundation and is published bi-annually on 15 June and 15 December. Submissions of academic articles, interviews and book reviews in the field of Korean studies and translations of Korean literature are accepted throughout the year, but articles intended for the next issue Vol. 13, No. 2, which will be a theme issue on Korean Neo-Confucianism, should be submitted no later than 1 September, 2010. 

For more information about Acta Koreana's aims, editorial board, submission guidelines, subscriptions and so on, please visit our website at http://actkoreana.kmu.ac.kr

Best wishes,

Michael Finch

ACTA KOREANA VOL. 13, NO. 1
TABLE OF CONTENTS
ARTICLES
Korea-Japan Theme Issue: Guest Editor’s Introduction 
By Kenneth R. Robinson                                                                1–5
 
Japanese Presence, Korean Military Bases, and Korean Maps 
in the Late Fifteenth Century
By Kenneth R. Robinson                                                              7–34
 
Korean Clothing and the Emperor of Japan in the 1682 
Korean Embassy to Japan 
By Eunji Jung                                                                                35–51
 
A Scroll of the 1748 Korean Embassy to Japan Preserved 
in the British Museum
By James B. Lewis                                                                          53–89
 
Japanese Wives of Resident Koreans and Their “Repatriation”
to North Korea
By Atsuko Aoki                                                                          91–112
 
New Interpretations of Japan’s Annexation of Korea:
A Conservative Agenda Groping for “Normalcy”
By Mark E. Caprio                                                                    113–134
 
 
 LITERATURE IN TRANSLATION
 
“The Factory Newspaper” by Kim Nam-ch’ŏn
Translated by Young-Ji Kang                                                   135–145
INTERVIEW
An Interview with Professor Yŏng-ho Ch’oe
Conducted by Tschung-Sun Kim                                              147–159
BOOK REVIEWS
Exodus to North Korea : Shadows from Japan ’s Cold War. 
By Tessa Morris-Suzuki.
Mark E. Caprio                                                                         161–166
 
Questioning Minds: Short Stories by Modern Korean Women Writers. 
By Yung-Hee Kim.  
Sharlyn Rhee                                                                           166–168
 
Organizing at the Margins: 
The Symbolic Politics of Labor in South Korea and the United States 
By Jennifer Jihye Chun.              
Sabine Burghart                                                                      169–173
 
Shamans, Nostalgias, and the IMF: South Korean Popular Religion in Motion.
By Laurel Kendall. 
Roger L. Janelli                                                                       173–175
 
Su-un and His World of Symbols.
By Paul Beirne. 
Carl Young                                                                               176–178
 
Modern Korean Drama. 
Edited by Richard Nichols.        
NohchoolPark                                                                        178–183
 
Living Dangerously in Korea : The Western Experience 1900–1950. 
By Donald N. Clark.       
Don Baker                                                                                 183–185
 
Born Again: Evangelicalism in Korea .
By Timothy S. Lee.
James H. Grayson                                                                     186–187
 
South Koreans in the Debt Crisis: The Creation of a Neoliberal Welfare Society. 
By Jesook Song.
Hyaeweol Choi                                                                        187–190
 
Korean Language in Culture and Society. 
Edited by Ho-min Sohn.
Gerard Krzic                                                                            190–195
OBITUARIES
In Memory of Samuel E. Martin       
Robert Ramsey                                                                         197–201
 
In Memory of Valery Yankovsky     
Tatiana Simbirtseva                                                                203–209


      
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