Koreanistik

Vortragsreihe der Koreanistik

April 17

Jie-Hyun Lim

(Sogang University)

Postcolonial Reflections on the Global  Memory  Formation: Holocaust, Stalinist Crime and Colonial Genocide
June 5

Hyun Ok Park

(York University)

A Sublime  Disaster: The Sewol Ferry Incident and the Politics of the Living Dead
June 19

Hyang Jin Jung

(Seoul National University)

Intimate sociability in inter-Korean encounters:  North Korean refugees, South Koreans, and the matters of maum and jeong
June 26

Bonnie Tilland

(Leiden University)

Peace, Love and  'Understanding Korean Society': The Collision of Hard and Soft Power in the KIIP (Korean Immigration and Integration Program)

July 17

Alte Aula,

16:00-20:00

Sung Un Gang

(Technische Universität Berlin)

Jung CHEN

(University of Cambridge)

Minwoo Jung

(Loyola University Chicago)

Queering Asia: Doing Field Research on Lives in the South Korean and Taiwanese Queer Community

July 24

Yuhee Park

(Korea University)

A Protestant martyrdom film and the conundrum of Yusin censorship: Reading the censorship file of Toward the High Place (1977~1981)

Yuhee Park (Korea University)

A Protestant martyrdom film and the conundrum of Yusin censorship: Reading the censorship file of Toward the High Place (1977~1981)

Wednesday July 24th, 18:00 c.t., Wilhelmstraße 133 , Room 30 (Lecture will be in Korean)

Abstract

Censorship, which succeeded “the Motion Picture Film Censorship Regulation” of 1926 during the Japanese colonial period, was finally ruled as unconstitutional in 1996. Yet even afterwards, there were “unrated films” which stirred controversy because there were no theatres where these films could be screened, effectively functioning as a screening ban. In this sense, censorship is a factor that must be considered whenever discussing films that premiered in South Korea during the 20th century, and the censorship files are materials that must be referenced side-by-side with the film itself whenever conducting film analysis. This presentation focuses on the censorship case of Toward the High Place, which had its screening postponed for over three years, even as it was a Protestant “enlightenment film” that did not appear to contradict the ideologies of the Park Chung Hee regime in 1977, and will reconstruct the processes by which this film was constituted. I will illuminate the dynamics and contexts that interacted with censorship in the maelstrom that was the final years of the regime, as well as their influence on cinematic representation, and through this, I argue that we can uncover the political portents and situations of the South Korean film world during this period.

Bio

Yuhee Park is a Professor at the Department of Creative Writing Media Studies at Korea University She studies the history of Korean cinema, focusing on the relationship between literature, censorship, and genre. She delves into the representation of film and its meaning making within the context of narrative relationships and history. On top of over sixty published articles and various edited volumes, she published multiple sole authored books such as 한국영화 표상의 지도 가족 국가 민주주의 여성 예술 다섯 가지 표상으로 읽는 한국영화사 Mapping Korean Film s Representation Reading Korean Film History through Representation of Family, Nation, Democracy, Women, and Art (2019). Currently she is writing a book on the relationship between cinematic representation and censorship in South Korean cinema from 1966-1987, a period where censorship system was applied early on from the screenwriting stage.


Sung Un Gang (Technische Universität Berlin), Jung CHEN (University of Cambridge), Minwoo Jung (Loyola University Chicago)

Wednesday, 17 July 2024, 16:00-20:00, Alte Aula

Sung Un Gang (Technische Universität Berlin)

Queer Re-Figuration of Spaces: Exploring LGBTQIA+ Everyday Lives in Seoul 

Abstract

The recent conflict surrounding the use of Seoul Plaza for the annual Seoul Queer Culture Festival vividly captures the spatial conflict between queer citizens (and their allies) and their opponents. While this event and other designated queer spaces have drawn much attention in both public and scholarly debates, little has been discussed about queer residents’ everyday lives. Considering the vulnerability of queer individuals to gentrification and the long history of anti-queer politics in South Korea, it is necessary to chart how LGBTQIA+ citizens construct, appropriate, or claim everyday spaces to understand Korean society, history, and culture.

This talk shares preliminary results from the ongoing research project “Smart People: Queer Everyday Life in Digitalized Spaces” and invites the audience to consider the affordability of the concept of re-figuration. With this new concept, scholars of the Collaborative Research Centre 1265 “Re-Figuration of Spaces” aim to develop a theoretical framework that can explain the entangled relationship
between spatial changes and various societies, based on case studies in Asia, Africa, Europe, and America.

Besides observations and analyses of queer everyday lives in streets, cafés, and homes, this talk also explores the challenges and possibilities of theory building. In doing so, it broadens the scope of
scholarly debates on queer lives from events to everyday experiences and suggests a critical engagement with the established mode of knowledge production.

Bio

Sung Un Gang is a researcher of media- and cultural studies. After finishing his B.A. in German Studies at Seoul National University and the M.A. in Modern German Literature at the University of Bonn, he successfully defended his doctoral dissertation The Making of Modern Subjects: Public Discourses about Korean Female Spectators in the Early Twentieth Century (forthcoming 2024) at the department of theater and media studies at the University of Cologne. In 2022, he joined Collaborative Research Center 1265 “Refiguration of Spaces” as a postdoc researcher. In his project entitled “Smart People: Queer Everyday Life in Digitalized Spaces,” he adopts space sociological approaches to understand the production of spaces through Seoul’s queer inhabitants and potential spatial conflicts. He was a scholarship holder of DAAD (2009 and 2010-2012) and a.r.t.e.s. Graduate School for Humanities Cologne (2015-2019). In 2018, he worked as a junior fellow at the International Center for Korean Studies of Kyujanggak Institute.

Jung Chen (University of Cambridge)
Queering Reproductive Justice? Taiwanese Gay Men’s (In)accessibility to Reproduction

Abstract

In 2019, Taiwan became the first country in Asia to legalise same-sex marriage, which was followed by Nepal in 2023 and Thailand presumably in 2024. Often reckoned as ‘the beacon of LGBTQ+ rights’ in Asia, Taiwan has been known for the annual ‘Taiwan LGBT Pride’ and LGBTQ+ friendly environment. Nevertheless, LGBTQ+ people’s reproductive rights are still held back five years after the grand success of marriage equality. Due to the current legal regulations, lesbian and gay couples cannot access assisted reproductive technologies (ARTs) and donor gametes locally but travel to other countries, such as the United States, Canada, Thailand, and Russia. In this talk, I will elaborate on how I approach the concept of ‘queer reproductive justice’ in my research on Taiwanese gay men’s transnational reproduction by looking at their reproductive constraints and accessibilities. First, I reflect on my data collection, including in-depth interviews and participant observation. Secondly, I analyse ‘stratified reproduction’  among gay men due to disparate socioeconomic and educational backgrounds by focusing on the ways in which they navigated varied ‘reproductive paths.’ Thirdly, I will revisit the concept of ‘queer reproductive justice’ by proposing a ‘multiple stratified reproduction’ framework to understand the (in)accessibilities and inequalities in gay men’s cross-border reproductive travels. Lastly, I invite us to think about the following questions: What kinds of reproductive justice do gay men in different positions (nationality, class, and socioeconomic background) need? What kind of solidarity do we need to build, and what kind of principles do we need for all individuals who participate in transnational reproduction, including LGBTQ+ intended parents and reproductive labourers?

Bio

Jung Chen (She/Her) is a PhD Candidate at the Department of Sociology, University of Cambridge. She is also in the Reproductive Sociology Research Group (ReproSoc). Her research interests are LGBTQ+ studies, the sociology of reproduction, and the sociology of family. As a Taiwanese and a young queer scholar, she is concerned about LGBTQ+ people’s rights in Taiwan and beyond. Her PhD project looks at queer reproductive justice and the (re)making of queer relatedness, specifically focusing on Taiwanese gay men who pursued fatherhood via transnational third-party reproduction.

Minwoo Jung (Loyola University Chicago)
Flexible Masculinities: Negotiating Gender, Sexuality, and Ethnicity in Embodied Ethnography

Abstract

How do individuals navigate various forms of hegemonic masculinity as they traverse different geographic and cultural boundaries? This talk introduces the concept of flexible masculinities to examine the increasing cultural demand and individual practice of flexibility in gendered interactions in a globalized world. Taking a transnational approach, this talk contextualizes flexible masculinities under the advanced regime of flexible accumulation, where ordinary individuals must navigate varied culturally-specific gender and sexuality regimes due to changing conditions of transnational mobility, communication, and interactions. Drawing on multi-sited and embodied ethnography from global queer Asia, this talk explores the flexible negotiation of masculinities in multiple geographic and cultural contexts amid global and regional social changes. The concept of flexible masculinities highlights how distinct configurations of masculinity arise in different geographies, prompted by shifts in global capitalism, social movements, and cultural flows, and how transnational subjects mobilize flexible embodiments of their gender, sexuality, and ethnicity to achieve a sense of respectability, belonging, and desirability. By doing so, this talk advances a transnational, intersectional, and queer intervention to our understandings of masculinities.

Bio

Minwoo Jung is an Assistant Professor of Sociology and Women’s Studies and Gender Studies at Loyola University Chicago. He is a sociologist whose work centers on gender, sexuality, race, and empire, with an emphasis on political activism and knowledge production. His research is situated at the intersection of the sociology of gender and sexualities, political sociology, and global and transnational sociology. His work has appeared in the British Journal of Sociology, The Sociological Review, and Social Movement Studies. He is currently based in Essen as an international fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study in the Humanities (KWI: Kulturwissenschaftliches Institut Essen) to work on his first book project, which examines the conditions and consequences of sexuality politics in Asia from a comparative perspective.

Program

16:00-16:15 - Arrival, registration, and coffee

16:15-16:20 - Welcome and Introduction
Gero Bauer, Managing Director of Center for Gender and Diversity Research

16:20-17:10 - Sung Un Gang
Queer Re-Figuration of Spaces: Exploring LGBTQIA+ Everyday Lives in Seoul
(Chair: Yewon Lee, Junior Professor of Korean Studies, University of Tübingen)

17:10-18:00 - Jung Chen
Queering Reproductive Justice? Taiwanese Gay Men’s (In)accessibility to Reproduction
(Chair: Yu-chin Tseng, Junior Professor of Chinese Studies & Co-Director of European Research Center on Contemporary Taiwan (ERCCT), University of Tübingen)

18:00-18:20 - Coffee Break

18:20-19:10 - Minwoo Jung
Flexible Masculinities: Negotiating Gender, Sexuality, and Ethnicity in Embodied Ethnography
(Chair: Yu-chin Tseng, Junior Professor of Chinese Studies & Co-Director of European Research Center on Contemporary Taiwan (ERCCT), University of Tübingen)

19:10-19:50 - Round Table
Doing Field Research on/with LGBTQIA+ Community in East Asia
(Chair: Yewon Lee, Junior Professor of Korean Studies, University of Tübingen)


Bonnie Tilland (Leiden University)

Peace, Love, and Understanding of Korean Society: The Collision of Hard and Soft Power in the Korean Immigration and Integration Program (KIIP)

Wednesday June 26, 18:00 c.t., Wilhelmstraße 133, Room 30

Abstract

This presentation examines the collision of hard and soft power in South Korean language and culture programs connected with immigration; namely, the Korea Immigration and Integration Program (KIIP). Soft Power, a concept commonly deployed in international relations and popularized by political scientist Joseph Nye in the 1990s, has been taken up recently in discussions of the rise and spread of Hallyu, as K-Pop and K-dramas draw tourists, capital, and international attention to South Korea. Hard power has been characterized as soft power‘s opposite; whereas soft power inspires and attracts, hard power is coercive and can involve physical force. Amidst many other South Korean government-sponsored or government-supported Korean language programs (such as the King Sejong Institutes), KIIP represents an interesting combination of soft power attraction in the form of language and culture programming for non-nationals in South Korea, and hard power in its disciplinary capacity to prevent or enable immigration visas.

South Korea is certainly not unique in mandating a citizenship integration program for migrants, as many European countries also require that those seeking permanent residency or citizenship enroll in these programs. What is somewhat unique in the South Korean case is the relatively high numbers of marriage migrants enrolled relative to other demographics, and the dramatic increase in participants in a short period of time. This presentation looks specifically at the final stage in the program before permanent residency or naturalization, the “Understanding Korean Society” class. Through combining analysis of the curriculum, autoethnography of the classroom experience, and investigation of social media groups, I aim to situate the program in broader understandings of language politics, soft power, and citizenship in contemporary South Korea.

Bio

Bonnie Tilland is a university lecturer in Korean Studies at Leiden University, the Netherlands. Her research has focused on gender and family, media, and the senses and affect in South Korea. She received her PhD in Sociocultural Anthropology from the University of Washington, and was previously associate professor in the East Asia International College at Yonsei University Mirae campus. She is working on a book tentatively titled „Sensible Mothering: Shifting Maternal Subjectivity in South Korea.“ Her new research focuses on language politics and soft power in language promotion efforts in South Korean and Taiwanese overseas language institutes.


Hyang Jin Jung (Seoul National University)

Intimate Sociability in Inter-Korean Encounters: North Korean Refugees, South Koreans, and the Matters of Maum and Jeong

Wednesday June 19, 18:00 c.t., Wilhelmstraße 133, Room 30

Abstract

North Korean refugees living in South Korea frequently report a profound sense of longing for a human connectedness that they claim to have lived by in the North. Based on participant observational data and verbal accounts about inter-Korean encounters, I trace how peoples in the two Koreas have generally diverged in their practices of intimate sociability, centering on the conceptions of jeong (affection) and maum (mind-heart), particularly in the social scope and the degree of social intimacy therein. The divergence is behind social misfires and communication difficulties experienced by North Korean refugees, making their emotional adaptation to South Korean society a daunting task. To North Korean refugees, a “good side of living in South Korea” is that they are free of the constraints of the collectivist life; yet what they find most lacking in the South Korean life is the kind of human connectedness that North Korean collectivism entailed. From their perspective, the best of both worlds would be their kind of intimate sociability without the collectivist routines and mobilizations, let alone surveillance. I contend that intimate sociability is deeply implicated in the ideological faultline between the two Koreas, not only because they are politically (more) appropriated in North Korea for its national family-making project (One Big Loving Family), but also because they are central to personhood and belonging among the peoples across the division.

Bio

Hyang Jin Jung is professor in the Department of Anthropology at Seoul National University, South Korea and president-elect of the Society for East Asian Anthropology, a section of the American Anthropological Association. She was the founding editor of Korean Anthropology Review. Her research interests lie in the intersection among culture, self, and emotion, with US and the two Koreas as her primary anthropological sites. Her ongoing research projects involve the psychocultural underpinnings of the North Korean statehood and society and the emotional culture of the postmodern American society. Her publications include “Family as a Model for a Religious Community: An Intercultural Conversation between North Korea’s Juche and US Evangelical Christianity” (American Religion, 2022).


Hyun Ok Park (York University, Canada)

 A Sublime Disaster: Antifascism and its Commune Form in Sewol Square

Wed. June 5th, 18:00 c.t., Wilhelmstraße 133, Room 30

Abstract

This presentation scrutinizes the contemporary political milieu of South Korea through the lens of fascism and antifascism, focusing on the seven-year-long encampment protest at Kwanghwamun Plaza following the Sewŏl disaster. Recent scholarship reconceptualizes fascism as a “process” rather than a discrete event (mass movement, regime type, charismatic leadership), highlighting three key processes: the appeal to national unity grounded in claims of ancient and racialized origins, the unmediated identification with the state, and commodity fetishism. In this talk, I discern these fascist tendencies in the entrenched political polarization and the recurrent candlelight protests since the 2000s in South Korea. Drawing on my ethnographic research, I investigate how the commune form of the Sewŏl encampment challenges these tendencies with its politics akin to Deleuze’s “minoritarian politics.”

Bio

Hyun Ok Park is a professor of sociology at York University, Canada. With archival and ethnographic research, she investigates global capitalism in colonial, industrial, and financial forms, democracy, socialism, and post-socialist transition. She is the author of two books: Two Dreams in One Bed: Empire, Social Life, and the Origins of the North Korean Revolution in Manchuria (Duke University Press, 2005); The Capitalist Unconscious: From Korean Unification to Transnational Korea (Columbia University Press, 2015, Korean translation in 2023). She is completing a book manuscript, “A Sublime Disaster: The Sewŏl Ferry Incident and the Politics of the Living Dead.” Her research has been supported by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the Academy of Korean Studies, the American Council of Learned Societies, and the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton. She was the founding Director of the Korean Office for Research and Education at York University. Prof. Dr. Park serves on the editorial boards of Global Perspectives and Economy and Society.


Prof. Dr. Jie-Hyun Lim (Sogang University)

Postcolonial Reflections on the Global Memory Formation: Holocaust, Stalinist Crime and Colonial Genocide

Wednesday April 17th, 18:00 c.t ., Wilhelmstraße 133, Room 30

Bio

Jie Hyun Lim holds the CIPSH chair of Global Easts and is the founding director of the Critical Global Studies Institute at Sogang University, Seoul. He has published widely on nationalism and Marxism in comparison, Polish history, transnational history and global memory. He is the principal investigator of the research projects of Mnemonic Solidarity: Colonialism, War, and Genocide in the Global Memory Space (2017-2024) and Series Editor of "Entangled Memories in the Global South" at Palgrave/Macmillan and "Global Easts" at the Central European University Press. His recent books include Victimhood Nationalism-Global History and Memory (Columbia Univ Press, 2024, forthcoming), Opfernationalismus. Erinnerung und Herrschaft in der postkolonialen Welt (Klaus Wagenbach 2024), Global Easts: Remembering, Imagining, Practicing (Columbia Univ Press, 2022), and Mnemonic Solidarity-Global Interventions (Palgave, 2021 co-edited with Eve Rosenhaft).

Abstract

Victimhood nationalism, in my definition, is a narrative template to grant posthumously the moral superiority, historical legitimacy, and political alibis to a present nation living in a legacy of hereditary victimhood by connecting the postmemory generations to ancestral victims via collective memory In this talk, I will articulate victimhood nationalism as a global phenomenon to explain the victimhood competition in the postwar coming to terms with the past in the global memory space across Europe and East Asia In the age of global memory, the spatial turn of  globalization reconfigured the national mnemoscape dramatically into the global one With the emergence of the human rights regime as a global memory formation, nationalist discourses have shifted from heroes to victims, which intensified globally the nationalist competition over who suffered most. The dialectical interplay of global and national memories in constructing victimhood nationalism demands a critical inquiry into the dichotomy of perpetrators vs victims, collective guilt vs innocence, national vs cosmopolitan memory, historical actors vs passive objects, over contextualization vs de-contextualization, historical conformism vs presentism, etc. I will investigate the entangled memories of victimhood nationalism in the global memory space focusing on the mnemonic nexus of Poland, Germany, Israel, Japan, and Korea.