[KS] book announcement (Koreans in Central Europe: To Yu-ho, Han Hŭng-su, and Others)

CedarBough T. Saeji umyang at gmail.com
Sat Nov 10 10:19:57 EST 2018


Wow, congratulations to Andreas et al, this volume looks like a treasure
trove significantly expanding our understanding of these early Korean
expats in Europe.

On Sat, Nov 10, 2018 at 5:43 AM Schirmer Andreas <
andreas.schirmer at univie.ac.at> wrote:

> Dear Korean Studies List managers,
>
> hopefully you can publish this book announcement (below) on your
> invaluable list.
>
> Thank you & best wishes,
>
> Andreas Schirmer
>
>
>
>
>
> Dear Colleagues,
>
>
>
> I am pleased to announce the publication of *Koreans in Central Europe:
> To Yu-ho, Han Hŭng-su, and Others*. After Frank Hoffmann’s *Berlin
> Koreans and Pictured Koreans*, this multi-authored book is the second of
> three volumes in the series *Koreans and Central Europeans: Informal
> Contacts up to 1950*. It is available in print and in eBook (PDF) format.
> The third volume, *Central Europeans in Korea*, multi-authored as well,
> is expected to be released early next year.
>
>
>
> *Andreas Schirmer (ed.), Koreans in Central Europe: To Yu-ho, Han Hŭng-su,
> and Others. Koreans and Central Europeans: Informal Contacts up to 1950,
> edited by Andreas Schirmer, vol. 2. Vienna: Praesens, 2018.* (xi, 317
> pages, 80 illustrations)
>
>
>
> ISBN 978-3-7069-0980-8 (print)
>
> ISBN 978-3-7069-2007-9 (eBook)
>
> *Koreans in Central Europe: To Yu-ho, Han Hŭng-su, and Others* is a
> multi-perspective compendium of evidence about two Korean archaeologists
> who spent formative but also troubled years in Europe during the 1930s and
> 1940s. Decades before a Korean diaspora in Europe began to take shape,
> these two embodied unique facets of what can be called a Korean colonial
> modernity outside of the Japanese empire. Han Hŭng-su stayed on for three
> more years after the end of World War II, publicly heralding Korea’s
> liberation and regained independence, enthusing over the advent of
> communism in the North, and managing to record an impressive array of
> achievements. Vienna was most defining for them as scholars of history and
> ethnology, although To Yu-ho had started in Frankfurt, while Han Hŭng-su
> finished his PhD in Switzerland and ended up a resident of Prague. Back
> home — after assiduous efforts to gain a foothold in Europe — both opted
> for the North out of firm conviction for the communist cause, and this
> resulted in a rivalry. Ultimately, a very typical fate befell them both:
> purged in the North, shunned in the South, and practically forgotten in
> East and West alike. A side story to the main focus is provided by chapters
> on Alice Hyun and Wellington Chung, two figures with a tangential relation
> to Han Hŭng-su that developed into a strong but in the end fatal
> Czechoslovak connection. Carefully researched, spotlighting numerous
> previously neglected or undiscovered sources, and richly illustrated, this
> volume is devoted to the examination of testimonies, writings and “traces”
> of very distinctive individuals. Special attention is given to how they
> negotiated European representations of East Asia — challenges to their
> Korean nationalist, yet nuanced, stances of self-assertion.
>
>
>
> *Table of Contents:*
>
> Editor’s Note · ix–xi
>
> Introduction · 1–10 (by Andreas SCHIRMER)
>
> Glimpses of To Yu-ho’s Life in Europe and Korea · 13–32 (by LEE
> Chang-hyun)
>
> A Korean Who Taught Japanese in 1930s Vienna: Do Cyong-ho (To Yu-ho)
> (Based on Finnish and Japanese Sources) · 33–44 (by OGAWA Yoshimi and
> Chikako SHIGEMORI BUČAR)
>
> To Yu-ho in Vienna · 45–57 (by Andreas SCHIRMER)
>
> Pioneering, Prolific, Purged: Aspects of To Yu-ho · 59–75 (by HONG
> Sŏn-p’yo)
>
> Sound Recordings of Koreans in the Vienna Phonogrammarchiv: The Voices of
> To Yu-ho (1934) and Kim Kyŏng-han (1944) · 77–91 (by Christian LEWARTH)
>
> Memories of To Yu-ho: A Personal Reminiscence · 92–93 (by Helga PICHT)
>
> Notes from Moscow · 97–109 (by HAN Hŭng-su, transl. by Ekaterina
> POKHOLKOVA)
>
> Han Hŭng-su in Vienna and Beyond: Puzzle Pieces of a Puzzling Life ·
> 111–184 (by Andreas SCHIRMER)
>
> Han Hŭng-su in German-Occupied Prague · 185–209 (by Zdenka KLÖSLOVÁ)
>
> Han Hŭng-su Captured on Film · 210–211 (by Zdenka KLÖSLOVÁ and Andreas
> SCHIRMER)
>
> Han Hŭng-su in Postwar Prague and His Return to Korea · 213–267 (by Zdenka
> KLÖSLOVÁ)
>
> Bibliography of Han Hŭng-su: Published and Unpublished Books, Articles,
> and Translations · 269–286 (by Jaroslav OLŠA jr. and Andreas SCHIRMER)
>
> Alice Hyun: Spy or Revolutionary? · 289–299 (by JUNG Byung Joon)
>
> A Korean-American Physician Stranded and Despairing in the Czechoslovak
> Periphery: Dr. Wellington Chung · 301–313 (by Vladimír HLÁSNY)
>
> Contributors · 315–317
>
>
>
> *Flyer: *
>
> http://bit.ly/KorCEur2
>
>
>
> Thank you for your attention!
>
> Andreas Schirmer
>
>
>
> Dr. Andreas Schirmer
>
> Department of East Asian Studies
>
> Palacky University Olomouc
>
> (andreas.schirmer at upol.cz)
>


-- 

CedarBough T. Saeji  ∞ Profile on Academia.edu
<https://ubc.academia.edu/CedarBoughSaeji>

Korea Foundation Postdoctoral Fellow, University of British Columbia
Department of Asian Studies



"Preserving intangible culture as static performances in the hope of
sustaining cultural diversity may do very little to foster the processes of
change and regeneration that are needed to ensure cultural vitality and
heterogeneity" (Pietrobruno 2009: 240).



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