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[ecrea] CFP - Edited Collection on Korean Dramas
Tue Jun 07 18:44:02 GMT 2016
Edited Collection on Korean Dramas
With the proliferation of global media on the Internet, Korean
television dramas have quickly become a popular phenomenon.Not just
permeating Asia, but also appearing in the U.S., the Middle East,
Europe, and Spanish-speaking countries among others, these dramas lead
to fans scrambling to provide subtitles in their own languages. Along
with being enthralled with characters and storylines, fans find
themselves listening to soundtracks and following their favorite actors
to other Korean dramas.
According to Youna Kim in the book, /The Korean Wave: Korean Media Go
Global/, “Korean TV dramas are emotionally powerful and self-reflexive.
While Korean producers do not pay particular attention to a global
formula for the success of TV drama, nevertheless they have found its
affective form useful to touch the sensibilities of disparate audiences…
(7).This goes to show that anyone can find a Korean drama suitable to
his or her tastes: they can select from Korean period dramas, comedy,
romance, action, crime/thriller, and so on.
Korean dramas provide food for thought on numerous topics of study. Kim
notes, “The Korean Wave culture embedded in dramas…is in essence all
things hybrid – a fusion of local, regional and Western cultures, forms,
styles, genres, narratives or identities, in part accelerated by the
developments in information and communication technologies, yet without
necessarily eliminating the best of Korea’s distinct traditional values,
emotional aesthetics and expressive performances” (17).Also emerging are
transcultural conversations and reconfigurations of identities.
We seek abstracts that apply diverse theoretical approaches to different
Korean dramas. Potential topics include but are not limited to the
following:
-Asian modernity
-pan-Asian identity
-influence from/on other cultures
-Confucian social order
-religion and spirituality
-identity politics and power
-gender and sexuality
-class struggle and social mobility
-disability and health
-food culture
-generational differences
-hybridity
-intertextuality
-media imperialism
-“pop nationalism” or K-dramas as a tool of soft power
-participatory fan culture
-transnational celebrities
These abstracts will be compiled into a book proposal that will be sent
to a popular-culture publisher. We anticipate sending the book proposal
sometime at the end of the year. Please share this message with
researchers that may be interested in sending in an abstract for the
collection.
For any questions, feel free to contact Dr. Ann-Gee Lee, English
Department, University of Arkansas-Fort Smith (ann-gee.lee /at/ uafs.edu)
<mailto:(ann-gee.lee /at/ uafs.edu)>or Dr. JaeYoon Park, Media Communications,
University of Arkansas-Fort Smith (jaeyoon.park /at/ uafs.edu)
<mailto:(jaeyoon.park /at/ uafs.edu)>
Please send abstracts of 500-1,000 words and if possible, an abbreviated
CV to (koreandramascollection /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(koreandramascollection /at/ gmail.com)>
Abstract deadline: August 28, 2016
Final draft deadline: May 31, 2017
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