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Challenging The Normal In Cold War South Korea and Japan. Session B:QUEERING THE STRAITS: UNRULY SUBJECTS ACROSS MODERN KOREAN AND JAPANESE STUDIES.
02/12/2022 @ 7:00 pm - 9:30 pm
We are pleased to announce the third and last in a series of three Zoom workshops on the theme of “QUEERING THE STRAITS: UNRULY SUBJECTS ACROSS MODERN KOREAN AND JAPANESE STUDIES.” These workshops are intended to facilitate greater communication and collaboration among scholars of Japan and Korea who work on issues of gender and sexuality, often in isolation from one another. We believe that such “queer” dialogues across borders and cultures offer a challenging yet vital opportunity to forge new intellectual and institutional bonds at a time when powerful forces continue to silence, erase, and marginalize seemingly minor subjects and their important points of view.
The upcoming workshop, “CHALLENGING THE ‘NORMAL’ IN COLD WAR SOUTH KOREA AND JAPAN,” will take place over the weekend of 11–13 February 2022. (See below for a detailed schedule.) This final workshop considers the intersections of postcolonial sentiment, Cold War capitalism, and cross-border travel in the wake of Japanese imperialism and US military occupation. By examining the circulation of bodies, goods, and ideas across national, regional, and other types of spatial boundaries, the three papers seek new ways of understanding the normative configurations of sexual practice, corporeal embodiment, and gender performance that helped sustain a superficially stable, yet deeply fractured, Cold War order in Northeast Asia.
Preregistration is required for this event. We particularly invite the participation of scholars whose work focuses on gender and sexuality in East Asia. To register, please fill out our RSVP form by February 10:
https://forms.gle/z1xbiAYiyDyWfexS6
A day or two before the start of the workshop, we will send an email to all registered participants with a link to the event. If you have any questions or trouble with registration, please email us at queeringthestraits@gmail.com.
This series of workshops is funded by the Academy of Korean Studies; the Center for Korean Research at Columbia University; the Columbia University Alumni Association of Korea; the Donald Keene Center of Japanese Culture (Columbia); the Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures (Columbia); the Hajime Mori Chair in Japanese Language and Literature at the University of California, San Diego; Transnational Korean Studies (UCSD); and the Weatherhead East Asian Institute (Columbia). The organizers thank these institutions and individuals for their generous support.
Todd Henry
Greg Pflugfelder
We are pleased to announce the third and last in a series of three Zoom workshops on the theme of “QUEERING THE STRAITS: UNRULY SUBJECTS ACROSS MODERN KOREAN AND JAPANESE STUDIES.” These workshops are intended to facilitate greater communication and collaboration among scholars of Japan and Korea who work on issues of gender and sexuality, often in isolation from one another. We believe that such “queer” dialogues across borders and cultures offer a challenging yet vital opportunity to forge new intellectual and institutional bonds at a time when powerful forces continue to silence, erase, and marginalize seemingly minor subjects and their important points of view.
The upcoming workshop, “CHALLENGING THE ‘NORMAL’ IN COLD WAR SOUTH KOREA AND JAPAN,” will take place over the weekend of 11–13 February 2022. (See below for a detailed schedule.) This final workshop considers the intersections of postcolonial sentiment, Cold War capitalism, and cross-border travel in the wake of Japanese imperialism and US military occupation. By examining the circulation of bodies, goods, and ideas across national, regional, and other types of spatial boundaries, the three papers seek new ways of understanding the normative configurations of sexual practice, corporeal embodiment, and gender performance that helped sustain a superficially stable, yet deeply fractured, Cold War order in Northeast Asia.
Preregistration is required for this event. We particularly invite the participation of scholars whose work focuses on gender and sexuality in East Asia. To register, please fill out our RSVP form by February 10:
https://forms.gle/z1xbiAYiyDyWfexS6
A day or two before the start of the workshop, we will send an email to all registered participants with a link to the event. If you have any questions or trouble with registration, please email us at queeringthestraits@gmail.com.
This series of workshops is funded by the Academy of Korean Studies; the Center for Korean Research at Columbia University; the Columbia University Alumni Association of Korea; the Donald Keene Center of Japanese Culture (Columbia); the Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures (Columbia); the Hajime Mori Chair in Japanese Language and Literature at the University of California, San Diego; Transnational Korean Studies (UCSD); and the Weatherhead East Asian Institute (Columbia). The organizers thank these institutions and individuals for their generous support.
Todd Henry
Greg Pflugfelder
SESSION B
QUEERING THE STRAITS: REFLECTIONS AND PROSPECTS
Sunday, 13 February 2022, 9:00–11:30 AM, Seoul/Tokyo time *
OPENING REMARKS
9:00–9:10 AM
Todd A. Henry
Associate Professor, Department of History, University of California, San Diego
REFLECTIONS
9:10–9:30 AM
Gregory M. Pflugfelder
Associate Professor, Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures & Department of History, Columbia University
9:30–9:50 AM
Jin-kyung Lee
Associate Professor, Department of Literature, University of California, San Diego
9:50–10:10
Todd A. Henry
Associate Professor, Department of History, University of California, San Diego
GENERAL DISCUSSION
10:10–11:30 AM
* Equivalent times for other time zones:
New York – Friday, 7:00–9:45 PM; Saturday, 7:00–9:30 PM
Chicago – Friday, 6:00–8:45 PM; Saturday, 6:00–8:30 PM
Los Angeles – Friday, 4:00–6:45 PM; Saturday, 4:00–6:30 PM
Honolulu – Friday, 2:00–4:45 PM; Saturday, 2:00–4:30 PM
Sydney – Saturday, 11:00 AM–1:45 PM; Sunday, 11:00 AM–1:30 PM
Hong Kong / Perth – Saturday, 8:00–10:45 AM; Sunday, 8:00–10:30 AM
Berlin / Paris / Rome – Saturday, 1:00–3:45 AM; Sunday, 1:00–3:30 AM
London – Saturday, 12:00–2:45 AM; Sunday, 12:00–2:30 AM