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Korea

Tagged With: Korea, Korea Studies

Hwisang Cho Book Talk

Korean Studies University Seminar will be online via Zoom.
Book Talk
Title: TBA
Hwisang Cho, Emory University

Friday, April 23, 2020
11 AM
Registration required.
Co-sponsored by Columbia University Seminar; the Academy of Korean Studies, Seoul, Korea

04/23/2021 by Work Study

Tagged With: Japan, Korea

Is Korea Following in Japan’s Footsteps?

(Live Webinar) Is Korea Following in Japan’s Footsteps?
About this Event
Tuesday, April 13, 2021 | 12:30 – 1:30 PM (EDT)

Register here.

Featuring:

Randall S. Jones
Professional Fellow, Center on Japanese Economy and Business (CJEB), Columbia Business School; Non-resident Fellow, Korea Economic Institute of America; Former Senior Counselor – East Asia and Head of Japan/Korea Desk, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD)

Moderated by

David E. Weinstein

Director, CJEB; Carl S. Shoup Professor of the Japanese Economy, Columbia University

What you’ll learn:

– How Korea has been able to achieve rapid convergence to the income levels in Japan and other advanced countries
– Why productivity in Korea lags well behind the highest-income countries, as in the case of Japan, contributing to unbalanced growth and income inequality
– How rapid population aging is putting strong upward pressure on public social spending, creating fiscal challenges comparable to those in Japan
About the speaker:

Randall S. Jones is a professional fellow at the Center on Japanese Economy and Business at Columbia University and a non-resident fellow at the Korea Economic Institute. Previously, he served as the Senior Counsellor for East Asia and as Head of the Japan/Korea Desk at the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) in Paris from 2002 until 2019. During his 30 years at the OECD, Dr. Jones wrote all 16 OECD Economic Surveys of Korea and 15 OECD Economic Surveys of Japan, in addition to a number of other publications. Before joining the OECD in 1989, he spent three years in the US government, serving at the Council of Economic Advisers and as an advisor in the State Department. Dr. Jones was also the vice-president of the Japan Economic Institute in Washington. Dr. Jones received a B.A. in Economics from Brigham Young University and a PhD in Economics from the University of Michigan in 1984. Dr. Jones was awarded the Decoration of the Order of the Rising Sun, Gold Rays with Rosette from the Government of Japan in 2015 and the Sungnye Medal, Order of Diplomatic Service from the Government of Korea in 2018.

Cosponsored by:

Center on Japanese Economy and Business (CJEB), Columbia Business School

APEC Study Center (ASC), Columbia University

Outreach Partner:

The Korea Society

Admission and Contact:

This is a free event. You must register for the webinar to receive the login details. Registrants will receive a link to access the live webinar upon registration.

If you have questions about the event, please contact us at cjeb@gsb.columbia.edu.

For more information about other CJEB events, visit our website or contact cjeb@gsb.columbia.edu.

04/13/2021 by Work Study

Tagged With: CKR, Korea, Korean Studies

“Searching for the Influence of Korean Identity, Aesthetics and Culture in the Exiled Korean-German Composer Isang Yun’s Monolog für Fagott (1983/84)”

Yoon Joo Hwang, University of Central Florida
Moderated by Seong Uk Kim, Columbia University

Monday, April 12, 2021
11:40 AM – 12:50 PM
Registration required.

Co-sponsored by Academy of Korean Studies; Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures, Columbia University

Abstract:

Music is a powerful and dynamic language that reflects culture, tradition and politics and is particularly well suited to examining these ideologies via its cross-cultural reach. The Korean German composer Isang Yun created own his musical language and voice, combining both Western musical forms of the European avant-garde and influences from East Asian culture and philosophies. The dramatic political situations of twentieth-century Korea strongly influenced
Yun’s life and works. His early years witnessed the Japanese occupation, the Korean War, the division of the peninsula into North and South Korea, and the dictatorship of Park Chung Hee. Yun was accused of being a communist spy and imprisoned in South Korea during the East Berlin Spy Incident (1967), and ultimately lived in exile in Germany for the rest of his life. His music was banned in Korea; as a result, most Koreans learned of him and his works much later
than scholars in other countries. Furthermore, his political experience is reflected in his works. Yun sought to make his music a bridge between South and North Korea despite their tensions and differing ideologies. His origins and his political experiences led him to express in music the quintessentially Korean emotion of 한 (Han), longing and nostalgia; thus Yun’s musical inventions sought to express an essence of “Koreanness” in his works.

04/12/2021 by Work Study

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