[KS] Announcement of publication of European Journal of Korean Studies Vol 24 (2)
Robert Winstanley-Chesters
R.Winstanley-Chesters at leeds.ac.uk
Tue Aug 5 14:00:00 EDT 2025
European Journal of Korean Studies Vol 24 (2)
The European Journal of Korean Studies aims to be the leading peer-reviewed, citation-indexed outlet for academic output in Europe on Korea in the English language, providing European and global scholars of Korea a venue that we know has been much in demand, long called for, and greatly anticipated.
Table of Contents
Individual Papers and Research Notes
Historical Transformations of North Korean Culinary Nationalism
TATIANA GABROUSSENKO, Korea University
Hell Deconstructed: Two Visions of Hell in Along with the Gods: The Two Worlds and Hellbound
ROMAN HUSARSKI, Jagiellonian University, DOMINIK RUTANA, SWPS University
Outstanding Universal Confucian Value: Negotiating the Inscription of Nine South Korean Confucian Academies as World Heritage between China and UNESCO
MARTIN GEHLMANN, Ruhr-Universität Bochum
What Part Are You Talking about? A Study of How Vague Expressions with Pubun (“Part”) Enhance Intersubjectivity in Korean Political Discourse
SANG-SEOK YOON, University of Iowa, MINKYU SUNG, Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology
Let’s Become Dazzling Heroes of Capitalism: South Korean Perspectives on Japanese “Business Novels” in the 1970s and 1980s
NADESCHDA BACHEM, University of Bonn
Revisiting Inter-Korean Diplomacy during the Sino-US Détente
(1969–1973): A Story of Multifaceted Exchanges
SANGPIL JIN, University of Copenhagen
>From the Lowest Class to Becoming Benefactors: Benefit Concerts of Kisaeng in Colonial Korea
HEEYOUNG CHOI, Northern Illinois University
Charles Dallet’s History of the Korean Church: 150 Years Later
BROTHER ANTHONY OF TAIZÉ
Further papers and research notes published online
Representations of Koreans in Russia in the Russian Press in the
Second Half of the Nineteenth–Early Twentieth Centuries
ALEXANDER KIM, Vladivostok State University, MARIIA SURZHIK, Garden-Institute, Far Eastern Branch, Russian Academy
of Sciences, ALEKSEI MAMYCHEV, Moscow State University
Communicative Democracy: In the Ancient Athenian Court and the Modern Korean Website pann.nate.com, EUNBIN KIM, Seoul National University
Papers in this issue explore the use and transformation of culinary nationalism in North Korea, visions and representations of hell in contemporary South Korean cinema production, and the navigation of the politics of world heritage by both South Korea and the People's Republic of China. Papers also investigate the linguistic importance of expressions of vagueness in South Korean political discourse, the processes of inter-Korean diplomacy at a moment of Chinese and United States engagement, the South Korean reception of Japanese literary culture focused on representations of capitalism and capitalist culture in "business novels" and the role of Kisaeng as community benefactors in colonial Korea. Finally, a research note from Brother Anthony of Taizé considers, near its 150th anniversary, the compilation and continued value of Charles Dallet’s Histoire de l’Eglise de Corée (History of the Korean Church). The European Journal of Korean Studies Vol 24 (2) also offers reviews of some of the most intriguing recent book-length writing, including Andrew David Jackson's The Late and Post-Dictatorship Cinephilia Boom and Art Houses in South Korea and Suk-Young Kim's Millennial North Korea: Forbidden Media and Living Creatively with Surveillance.
We welcome new writing by scholars from Europe, Korea, Australasia, and beyond. We take a detailed approach to peer review and copy editing, are committed to diversity, and take particular pride in our work with early career scholars. The journal appears twice a year, has an ISSN number and is now a member of Crossref. The European Journal of Korean Studies is indexed in SCOPUS and ESCI/Web of Science, as well as having been included in the Modern Languages Association International Bibliography and the MLA Directory of Periodicals, and is under review for inclusion in SSCI/Web of Science.
To obtain a copy of the European Journal of Korean Studies, visit our website for further information at www.ejks.org.uk<http://www.ejks.org.uk/> and purchase a subscription, individual issues, or articles.
The European Journal of Korean Studies subscription rates for students (up through graduate student/PhD level) are very reasonably priced online at £15 per year. Subscriptions for salaried scholars are priced online at £30 per year, and institutional subscriptions (accessed via IP authentication and EZ Proxy) are available through EBSCO, Harrassowitz, Prenax and Schweitzer Online at £140 per year. The journal is now also available on the EBSCOhost platform. You may also become a member of the British Association for Korean Studies and receive this, future, and past issues free of charge.
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