Sigimsae thoughts
토요일, 7월 30, 2005
  홍진숙 Hong Chin-suk village 동네

홍진숙
village 동네 45X33 woodblock print 木版 1997
 
금요일, 7월 29, 2005
  my thesis' ongoing works cited
Peruse this for many informative readings (plus some other stuff thrown in):
(My thesis is on Seo Taiji 서태지, his music and masculinity 남성성)


Changnŭbyŏl at'sŭt'ŭ:Rok (Taep'yogasu). (2005, June 12). Retrieved June 13, 2005, from
http://music.bugs.co.kr/music/ArtistGenre.asp?country=kpop&genre_code=4.

Abelmann, Nancy. (2003). The melodrama of mobility: Women, talk, and class in contemporary South Korea. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press.

Baek, Sun Ki. (1996). Daejung munhwa t'eksŭtŭ-ŭi 'daŭisŏng' gwa suyongja 'haedok' – Sŏ T’aeji-wa aidŭl ŭi "Comeback Home" e daehan wuarrisŭ ŭi punsŏkt'ŭl jŏkyongŭl jungshimŭro (The sign in today's society, ' plurality ' of meaning and reader's ' decipherment ' of mass culture texts - the case of Seo Taiji's "Comeback Home"). Kihohakǒngu, 2, 211-258.

Baranovitch, Nimrod. (2003). China's new voices: Popular music, ethnicity, gender, and politics, 1978-1997. Berkeley: University of California Press.

Bradby, Barbara, & Laing, David. (2001). Introduction to 'Gender and Sexuality' special issue. Popular Music, 20(3), 295-300.

Cheng, Sea-ling. (2000). Assuming manhood: Prostitution and patriotic passions in Korea. East Asia: An International Quarterly, 18(4), 40-78.

Cho, Han Haejoang. (2000). "You are entrapped in an imaginary well": the formation of subjectivity within compressed development - a feminist critique of modernity and Korean culture. Inter-Asia Cultural Studies, 1(1), 49-69.

Choi, Chung-moo. (1998). Nationalism and construction of gender in Korea. In E. H. Kim & C. Choi (Eds.), Dangerous women: gender and Korean nationalism (pp. 9-31). New York, NY: Routledge.

Choi, Chung-moo. (2002). The politics of gender aestheticism and cultural nationalism in Sopyonje and The Genealogy. In D. James & K. H. Kim (Eds.), Im Kwon-Taek: The making of a Korean national cinema. Detroit: Wayne State University Press.

Choi, Jung-ah. (2005). New generation's career aspirations and new ways of
marginalization in a postindustrial economy. British Journal of Sociology of Education, 26(6), 269-283.

Chŏn, Kyu Ch'an. (1998). P'osŭt'ŭ sidaeŭi munhwachŏngch'i. Seoul: K'ŏmyunik'eisyŏn Buksŭ (Communication books).

Connell, R. W. (1995). Masculinities. Berkeley: University of California Press.

Connell, R. W. (2000). The men and the boys. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press, in
association with Blackwell Publishers.

Chung, Hee-joon. 2003. Sports star vs rock star in globalizing popular culture.
International Review for the Sociology of Sport, 38(1), 99-108.

Darling-Wolf, Fabienne. (2003). Male Bonding and Female Pleasure: Refining
Masculinity in Japanese Popular Cultural Texts. Popular Communication, 1(2), 73-88.

Darling-Wolf, Fabienne. (2004). SAMP, sex, and masculinity: Constructing the perfect female fantasy in Japanese popular music. Popular Music and Society, 27(3), 358-370.

Dibben, Nicola. (2002). Constructions of femininity in 1990s girl-group music. Feminism and Psychology, 12(2), 168-175.

Dunn, Leslie C., & Jones, Nancy A. (Eds.). (1994). Embodied voices: representing female vocality in Western culture. Cambridge; New York:
Cambridge University Press.

Fast, Susan. (2001). In the houses of the Holy: Led Zeppelin and the power of rock music. New York: Oxford University Press.

Feigon, Lee. (1994). Gender and the Chinese student movement. In J. N. Wasserstrom & E. J. Perry (Eds.), Popular protest and political culture in modern China (2nd ed., pp. 125-135). Boulder: Westview Press.

Fung, Anthony, & Curtin, Michael. (2002). The anomalies of being Faye (Wong):
Gender politics in Chinese popular music. International Journal of Cultural
Studies, 5(3), 263-290.

Hearn, Jeff. (2004). From hegemonic masculinity to the hegemony of men. Feminist Theory, 5(1), 49-72.

Hosakawa, Shuhei. (2002). Blacking Japanese: experiencing otherness from afar. In D. Hesmondhalgh & K. Negus (Eds.), Popular Music Studies (pp. 223-237). London: Arnold.

Howard, Keith. (1998). Blending the wine and stretching the wineskins: New Korean music for old Korean instruments. In S.-c. Yi (Ed.), Yi Hyegu paksa 90 kinyom umakhak non'go (Essays in Honour of Prof. Lee Hye-Ku's 90th Birthday) (pp. 503-535). Seoul: Seoul National University.

Howard, Keith. (2002). Exploding ballads: The transformation of Korean pop music. In R. King & T. J. Craig (Eds.), Global goes local: Popular culture in Asia (pp. 80-95). Vancouver: UBC Press.

Jager, Sheila M. (1996). Women, resistance and the divided nation: The romantic rhetoric of Korean reunification. The Journal of Asian Studies, 55(1), 3-21.

Jager, Sheila Miyoshi. (2002). Monumental histories: Manliness, the military, and the War Memorial. Public Culture, 14(2), 387-409.

Jung, Eun-Young. Forthcoming. The role of Korean popular music in the creation of a new generation's cultural identity: The music of Seo Taiji. In K. Howard (Ed.), Riding the ‘Korean Wave’: Pop music for a new Korea, pop music for a new Asia: Routledge.

Keil, Charles. (1994). Motion and feeling through music. In C. Keil & S. Feld (Eds.), Music grooves: Essays and dialogues. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Killick, Andrew P. (1991). Nationalism and internationalism in new music for Korean instruments. Korea Journal, 31(3), 104-116.

Kim, Dong Sik. (2004, February 6). Tashi mannan So T'ae Chi (Seo Taiji revisited). Chugan Hankuk.

Kim, Hyernsup. (1997). Seo Taiji: a Sample Approach to Korean Sub-Culture in the First Half of the 1990's. Unpublished MA paper, City University, London.

Kim, Hyun Mee. 2001. Work, Nation and Hypermasculinity: The 'Woman' Question in the Economic Miracle and Crisis in South Korea. Inter-Asia Cultural Studies, 2(1), 53-68.

Kim, Hyun Mee (Translated by Hong Sung Hee). (2004). Feminization of the 2002 World Cup and women’s fandom. Inter-Asia Cultural Studies, 5(1), 42 - 51.

Kim, Kyung Hyun. (2004). The remasculinization of Korean cinema. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press.

Kim, Seung-kyung, & Finch, John. (2002). Living with rhetoric, living against rhetoric: Korean families and the IMF economic crisis. Korean Studies, 26(1), 120-139.

Kim, Taeyon. (2003). Neo-Confucian body techniques: Women's bodies in Korea's consumer society. Body and Society, 9(2), 97-113.

Korean gender roles collapsing. (2004, December 26). Retrieved December 29, 2004, from
http://english.chosun.com/w21data/html/news/200412/200412260015.html.

Lee, Aie-Rie. (2003). Stability and Change in Korean Values. Social Indicators Research, 62-64(1-3), 93 - 117.

Lee, Jooran. 2000. Remembered branches: Towards a future of Korean homosexual film. Journal of Homosexuality, 39(3-4), 273-281.

Lee, June J. H. (2002). Discourses of illness, meanings of modernity: A gendered contruction of Sŏnginbyŏng. In L. Kendall (Ed.), Under construction (pp. 55-78). Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press.

Lee, Kee Hyeung. (2002). Toward a cultural history in the Korean present: Locating the cultural politics of the everyday. Unpublished PhD, University of Chicago at Urban-Champaign, Urbana.

Lee, Kee Hyeung. 2000. Detraditionalization of society and the rise of cultural studies in South Korea. Inter-Asian Cultural Studies, 1(3), 477-488.

Lu, Sheldon H. (2000). Soap opera in China: The transnational politics of visuality, sexuality, and masculinity. Cinema Journal, 40(1), 25-47.

McCracken, Allison. (1999). "God's gift to us girls": Crooning, gender and the re-creation of American popular song, 1928-1933. American Music, 17(4), 365-395.

Metro Sexual: A new male image or media commodity? (2004, November 4). Retrieved November 5, 2004, from
http://english.chosun.com/w21data/html/news/200411/200411030017.html.

Middleton, Richard. (2003). Singing. In J. Shepherd, D. Horn & D. Laing (Eds.),
Continuum encyclopedia of popular music of the world (Vol. 2, pp. 164-167).
London; New York: Continuum.

Middleton, Richard. (2003). Voice. In J. Shepherd, D. Horn & D. Laing (Eds.),
Continuum encyclopedia of popular music of the world (Vol. 2, pp. 455-457).
London; New York: Continuum.

Moon, Seungsook. (2002). The Production and subversion of hegemonic masculinity: Reconfiguring gender hierarchy in contemporary South Korea. In L. Kendall (Ed.), Under construction: The gendering of modernity, class, and
consumption in the Republic of Korea (pp. 79-113). Honolulu: University of
Hawaii Press.

Morelli, Sarah. (2001). Who is a Dancing Hero? Rap, hip-hop and dance in Korean popular culture. In T. Mitchell (Ed.), Global noise: Rap and hip-hop outside the USA. Middletown, Conn: Wesleyan University Press.

Nelson, Laura C. (2000). Measured excess: Status, gender, and consumer nationalism in South Korea. New York: Columbia University Press.

Pak, Ŭn Kyŏng. (2003). God Sŭt'adŏm kwa p'aendŏm. Seoul: Hanul.

Paquet, Darcy. (2000). Happy End (review). Retrieved April 12, 2005, from
http://koreanfilm.org/kfilm99.html#happyend.

Park, Shin-gil. (2000). Negotiating identities in a performance genre: the case of P'ungmul and Samulnori in contemporary Seoul. Unpublished PhD,
University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh.

Party, Daniel. (2004). (Dissertation Prospectus) Placer Culpable: Globalization, gender and melodrama in Latin-American Balada. Retrieved November 17, 2004, from
http://www.sas.upenn.edu/~dparty/pdf/Proposal.pdf.

Purcell, Conor. (2005, March 17). Foreigners fear for safety in South Korea. Retrieved April 4, 2005, from
http://www.greatreporter.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=359.

Robinson, Michael. (1984). National identity and the thought of Sin Ch'ae-ho: Sadaejuŭi and Chuch'e in history and politics. The Journal of Korean Studies, 5, 121-142.

Roe, Jae H. (2001). "Louder than a Bomb": The cultural politics of hardcore rap in the U.S. and Korea. Miguk Haknunjip (Journal of American Studies), 33(2), 107-120.

Sellnow, Deanna D. (1999). Music as persuasion: Refuting hegemonic masculinity in "He thinks he'll keep her". Women's Studies in Communication, 22(1), 66-84.

Seo, Dong-Jin. 2001. Mapping the vicissitudes of homosexual identities in South Korea. (Translated by Mark Mueller). Journal of Homosexuality, 40(3/4), 65-79.

Shepherd, John, & Wicke, Peter. (1997). Music and cultural theory. Cambridge, MA: Polity Press.

Shin, Ji-young. (1998, July 2). Yŏ sŏng kwa rok / seksyo'ŏllit'i (in rock) (Women and rock / sexuality (in rock)). Retrieved March 10, 2005, from
http://www.unninet.co.kr/cafe/bbs_view.asp?cafe_Idx=103&textcode=3145.

Shin, Soon-chul. (1998). Importing, Negotiating, and Articulating Identities: Popular Music and Teen Culture in Korea. Unpublished MA, University of Georgia.

Song, Jesook. (Forthcoming). "Family Breakdown" and invisible homeless women: Neo- liberal governance during the Asian Debt Crisis in South Korea 1997-2001. Positions: East Asia cultures critique.

Song, Jesook. (2003). Shifting technologies: Neoliberalization of the welfare state in South Korea, 1997-2001. Unpublished Ph.D., University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.

Vernallis, Carol. (1994). The aesthetics of music video: The relation of music and image. Unpublished Ph.D., University of California, San Diego.

Willoughby, Heather A. (2005). Image is everything: The marketing of femininity in South Korean popular music. Unpublished manuscript, Ehwa Women's University, Seoul.

Yi, Uyong. (1996). PD Yi Uyong-eui uri taejung eumak ilki (readings on pop music by producer Yi Uyong). Seoul: Changgongsa.

Young, Greg. (2004). ‘So slide over here’: The aesthetics of masculinity in late twentieth-century Australian pop music. Popular Music, 23(2), 173-193.

Yun, Hyŏng Suk. (2001). Ch’ŏngsonyŏn’gwa daeanmunhwaŭi mosaek (An investigation of youth and alternative culture). Sahwiyŏngu, 2, 53-98.

 
  my new blog
Welcome to my new blog. I've been thinking it would be nice to have a blog.

Nowadays I'm just working on my master's thesis on Seo Taiji 서태지 and masculinity 남성성. I am so slow. So far I have two chapters written up:

Chapter 2:
Alternative discourse of South Korean
masculinity through soft vocals in Seo Taiji's early slow songs,
1992-1994
Chaper 3:
“Hayoga”performances' relationship to three themes of South
Korean masculinity: fraternity, remasculinization and
competition with‘western' masculinities
I have some good news. In november I will present part of Chapter 2 as a paper at this conference: Moving Masculinities: Crossing Regional and Historical Borders http://oceanicencounters.anu.edu.au/MovingMasculinities/index.html That should be fun. It's in Australia!
 
My South Korea blog
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