MCLC: Cross-Currents no. 9

Denton, Kirk denton.2 at osu.edu
Thu Jan 16 08:32:05 EST 2014


MCLC LIST
From: Keila Diehl <crosscurrents at berkeley.edu>
Subject: Cross-Currents no. 9
******************************************************

New Online Content:  Cross-Currents: East Asian History and Culture Review

Issue 9, December 2013
URL: https://cross-currents.berkeley.edu/e-journal/issue-9

 
Special issue: "The Globalization of K-pop: Local and Transnational
Articulations of South Korean Popular Music"
Guest edited by John Lie (UC Berkeley)

Table of Contents: 

Co-editors' Note to Readers

Articles:

Introduction to "The Globalization of K-pop”
John Lie (UC Berkeley)

 
Why Didn’t “Gangnam Style” Go Viral in Japan?: Gender Divide and
Subcultural Heterogeneity in Contemporary Japan
John Lie (UC Berkeley)

 
Hallyu across the Desert: K-pop Fandom in Israel and Palestine
Nissim Otmazgin and Irina Lyan (Hebrew University of Jerusalem)

 
K-pop Reception and Participatory Fan Culture in Austria
Sang-Yeon Sung (University of Vienna)

 
K-pop in Korea: How the Pop Music Industry is Changing a
Post-Developmental Society
Ingyu Oh (Korea University) and Hyo-Jung Lee (Yonsei University)


Review Essays, Notes & Bibliographies:

Law as a Contested Terrain under Authoritarianism
Ching Kwan Lee (UC Los Angeles)
 

Rachel Stern. Environmental Litigation in China: A Study in Political
Ambivalence. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2013. 310 pp. $99
(cloth).

 
Waikeung Tam. Legal Mobilization under Authoritarianism: The Case of
Post-Colonial Hong Kong. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012. 234
pp. $95 (cloth).

 
Historicizing Queer Stories from Asia
Petrus Liu (Yale-NUS College)

Lucetta Yip Lo Kam. Shanghai Lalas: Female Tongzhi Communities and
Politics in Urban China. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, 2012. 152
pp. $45 (cloth), $25 (paper).

 
J. Keith Vincent. Two-Timing Modernity: Homosocial Narrative in Modern
Japanese Fiction. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2012. 248 pp.
$40 (cloth).

 
Coming to Terms with War: Traumas, Identities, and the Power of Words
R. Keith Schoppa (Loyola University Maryland)

Tobie Meyer-Fong. What Remains: Coming to Terms with Civil War in 19th
Century China. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2013. 336 pp. $40
(cloth/ebook).

 
Aaron William Moore. Writing War: Soldiers Record the Japanese Empire.
Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2013. 388 pp. $45 (cloth/ebook).

 

Photo Essay:

Dance of Anguish: Poetic Texts from 1920s Korea
Curator: Wayne de Fremery
 

Printshops, Pressmen, and the Poetic Page in Colonial Korea Wayne de
Fremery (Sogang University)


Readings from Asia:

 
The Microhistory of Anti-Japanese Speech Acts
Andre Schmid (University of Toronto)

Jung Byung Wook, Puron yŏlchŏn: Mich’in saenggaggi paetsok esŏ naonda [The
biographies of rebellious people in colonial Korea]. Seoul:
Yŏksabipyŏngsa, 2013. ISBN: 9788976965431.


Keila Diehl, Ph.D. 
Managing Editor 
Cross-Currents: East Asian History and Culture Review
Institute of East Asian Studies, UC Berkeley
2223 Fulton St., 6th Floor
Berkeley, CA 94720-2318
tel. 510-643-0704 
http://cross-currents.berkeley.edu
 




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