[KS] 2022 KOREAN STUDIES v.46 published
Cheehyung Harrison Kim
cheehyungkim at gmail.com
Wed Aug 3 17:35:47 EDT 2022
*Greetings, KS Community! Very delighted to announce the publication of
2022 Korean Studies v.46.*
The 2022 volume carries 11 superb articles and 5 excellent book reviews.
The topics include South Korea's protest songs from the 1960s (*Pil Ho Kim*),
the publication craze of lineage registry *chokpo* during Korea's colonial
period (*Yang-Hee Hong*), and the literary production of Korean writers
living in Central Asia, *Koryŏ saram literature *(*Susanna Lim*). The
volume also has a fascinating *Special Section, titled "Music that Moves:
Sonic Narratives in Korea,"* guest-edited by *Dafna Zur* and *Susan
Hwang*. Thank
you. And of course, if you have ideas for an article or a special issue,
I'm all ears.
Cheehyung Harrison Kim | chk7 at hawaii.edu
Associate Professor, Department of History | Editor, KOREAN STUDIES |
University of Hawaii at Manoa, USA
The online version on Project MUSE: https://muse.jhu.edu/issue/48250/online
*Korean Studies v. 46 2022*
*Contents*
Editor's Note
*Cheehyung Harrison Kim (Univ Hawaii-Manoa)*
*Special Section: Music That Moves: Sonic Narratives in Modern Korea*
Introduction to the Special Section
*Dafna Zur (Stanford, US), Susan Hwang (UC Santa Barbara, US)*
When Songs Don't Work: Western Tonalities and Korean Breath in Children's
Songs of the Colonial Period
*Yoon Joo Hwang (Univ Central Florida, US), Dafna Zur*
>From Waifs to Songbirds: The World Vision Korean Orphan Choir
*Katherine In-Young Lee (UCLA, US)*
>From McArthur's Landing to Trump's Fire and Fury: Sonic Depictions of
Struggle and Sacrifice in a North Korean Short Story, Film, and Opera
*Alexandra Leonzini (Cambridge, UK), Peter Moody (Columbia, US)*
Songs of the Multitude: The April Revolution, the 6.3 Uprising, and South
Korea's Protest Music of the 1960s
*Pil Ho Kim (Ohio State, US)*
>From Victimhood to Martyrdom: "March for the Beloved" and the Cultural
Politics of Resistance in 1980s' South Korea
*Susan Hwang*
What's for Sale? Selling Songs and K-pop Idols in Korean Commercials
*Roald Maliangkay (Australian National)*
*Review Article*
Monopolizing Authority: The Construction of Presidential Power in South
Korea
*Hyang-Joo Lee (Bristol, UK)*
*Research Articles*
The Discourse on Multi-Child Families in South Korea's Media and Popular
Culture
*Irene Yung Park (Yonsei, SK)*
Cultivating Freedom in South Korea: Media Discourse on Chayu during the
Early Park Chung-hee Period
*Jungyoung Kim (UC San Diego, US)*
The Paradox of Genealogy: Family Politics and the Publishing Surge of
Chokpo in Colonial Korea
*Yang-Hee Hong (Hanyang, SK)*
Dual Homeland: Cho Myŏng-hŭi and the Origins of Koryŏ Saram Literature
*Susanna Lim (Univ Oregon, US)*
*Book Reviews*
The Power of the Brush: Epistolary Practices in Chosŏn Korea by Hwisang Cho
(review)
*Owen Stampton (SOAS, UK)*
Sovereignty Experiments: Korean Migrants and the Building of Borders in
Northeast Asia, 1860–1945 by Alyssa M. Park (review)
*June Hee Kwon (Cal State Sacramento, US)*
Top-down Democracy in South Korea by Erik Mobrand (review)
*Myunghee Lee (Univ Copenhagen, DK)*
After the Korean War: An Intimate History by Heonik Kwon (review)
*Hana Kim (Univ Hawaii-Manoa, US)*
The Cost of Belonging: An Ethnography of Solidarity and Mobility in
Beijing's Koreatown by Sharon J. Yoon (review)
*Minjeong Kim (San Diego State, US)*
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