Korean Studies Dissertation Workshop > Competitions

Korean Studies Dissertation Workshop 2010

Recipients

EuyRyung Jun
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Anthropology
Making Multicultural Citizens: Discourses and Practices of Damunhwa Among South Korean Migrant Centers
June Hee Kwon
Duke University, Cultural Anthropology
Between Two Dreams: Migration and Development on the Border of China and Korea
Kathleen Lee
University of Pennsylvania, Education
The Impact of English on Language Policy and Teaching Practices in South Korean Education
Sharon Heijin Lee
University of Michigan, American Culture
The Politics of Beauty: Neoliberalism, Race and Transnationalism in Seoul and Los Angeles
Hye-ri Oh
State University of New York at Binghamton, Art History
Photography and Criticism in Korea: Modernity, National Identity and the Conception of Photography from the late Chosun Dynastic Period to Japanese Colonialism
Seo Young Park
University of California, Irvine, Anthropology
Making Time in the 24-Hour City: Gender, Labor, and Experiment in Seoul’s Dongdaemun Market, Korea
Jeongsoo Shin
University of Washington, Asian Languages and Literatures
The Making of King Peony in Korean Literature
Josie Yeon Sohn
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, East Asian Languages and Cultures
Cosmopolitan Cinephilia: South Korean College Students’ Challenge to Film Nationalism
Bonnie Tilland
University of Washington, Anthropology
Dramatic Restructuring: The Staging of Family Values and National Identity in South Korea
Seonggee Um
University of Toronto, Faculty of Social Work
The Role and the Status of Transnational Care Workers in the South Korean Long-term Care Sector
Erica Mary Vogel
University of California, Irvine, Anthropology
Converting Possibilities, Migrating Dreams: Money, Religion and Expertise for Peruvian Migrant Laborers in South Korea
Sunyoung Yang
University of Toronto, East Asian Studies
Korean Internet Addict Community and Its Cultural Politics Against the Neoliberalization of South Korea