编辑注意

IF 0.7 3区 社会学 0 ASIAN STUDIES
Jisoo M. Kim
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引用次数: 0

摘要

《韩国研究杂志》(JKS)是一本跨学科期刊,在所有学科中发表关于韩国的广泛主题。JKS的主要贡献之一是引入了新的学术,将不同的主题、理论、地理、时间和文化带入研究韩国和世界。JKS的作者努力研究该领域的参数和韩国的意义。尽管其目的不是制定一个固定的意义,但显而易见的是,学者们正在不断扩大认识论的边界,并在韩国研究中开辟新的领域。根据多个学科轨迹,2023年春季版包括七篇文章和四篇书评。本期文章探讨了广泛的政治、社会和文化问题的动态——牛瘟与跨境控制、浪漫主义与民族主义、国防与技术、发展状态与功利主义意识形态、阶级制度与国家建设、素食主义与跨国流动、多元文化与文化公民。这些文章为国家、社会和文化的复杂交叉提供了一个重要的视角。Joseph Seeley和Kevin M.Smith的前两篇文章涵盖了殖民时期的朝鲜。Seeley介绍了一个研究不足的话题,该话题与1910年至1930年代的传染病有关,与当今问题非常相关。本文以牛瘟为镜头,探讨了日本驻朝鲜总司令如何试图控制来自朝鲜半岛北部中朝边境的病毒“入侵”。Seeley展示了殖民政府如何实施现代兽医制度,以及韩国人如何抵抗牛瘟的爆发。这篇文章提供了一个从历史中学习20世纪初如何处理病毒性疾病的机会,这与今天21世纪的新冠肺炎产生了共鸣。在Im Hwa的《Hyŏnhaetan》中,史密斯转向殖民文学的分析,他审视了讨论海峡的海上诗歌
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Editorial Note
The Journal of Korean Studies (JKS) is an interdisciplinary journal that publishes in all disciplines on a broad range of topics concerning Korea. One of the main contributions of JKS is to introduce new scholarship that brings diverse themes, theories, geographies, temporalities, and cultures to study Korea and the world. Authors of JKS grapple with the parameters of the field and the meaning of Korea. Although the aim is not to formulate a fixed meaning, what is clear is that scholars are continuously expanding epistemological boundaries and breaking new ground in Korean studies. Drawing on multiple disciplinary trajectories, the spring 2023 issue comprises seven articles and four book reviews. The articles in this issue explore the dynamics of broad political, social, and cultural issues—rinderpest and cross-border control, Romanticism and nationalism, national defense and technology, the developmental state and utilitarian ideology, class system and state-building, veganism and transnational mobility, and multiculturalism and cultural citizenship. These articles offer a crucial lens on the complex intersections of state, society, and culture. The first two articles, by Joseph Seeley and Kevin M. Smith, cover colonial Korea. Seeley introduces an understudied topic related to infectious disease between 1910 and the 1930s that is very relevant to the present-day issue. Using rinderpest as a lens, this article examines how the Japanese Government-General of Korea attempted to control viral “invasions” from the Sino-Korean border in the northern peninsula. Seeley shows how the colonial government implemented the modern veterinary regime and Koreans resisted rinderpest outbreaks. This article offers an opportunity to learn from history how viral diseases were dealt with in the early twentieth century, which resonates with today’s COVID-19 in the twenty-first century. Shifting to the analysis of colonial literature, Im Hwa’s Hyŏnhaet’an, Smith examines the maritime poetry that discusses the strait that
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
23
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