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Before the Coherent Plot: Kim Sowo˘l’s Editors, 1920-1925
( Wayne De Fremery ) 서울대학교 규장각한국학연구원 2014 Seoul journal of Korean studies Vol.27 No.1
In this paper I argue for a new attention to the sociology of Korean colonial-era texts, and for a critical rethinking of contemporary modes of literary/textual criticism as they relate to the socialization of Korean literary works from the early twentieth century. Studying the editors who oversaw the publication of poems and stories by the canonical Korean author Kim Sowo˘l (1902-1934) in the periodicals of his day repositions these literary texts in the socio-textual contexts of their initial production―allowing us to glimpse them before they were canonical. Recontextualizing Kim Sowo˘l’s works to emphasize the textual contexts in which they initially appeared productively reorients investigations of Kim’s oeuvre and presents new creative critical opportunities; we can begin to rethink our methods of engaging his corpus. A review of scholarly approaches to Kim Sowo˘l reveals that the conditions under which his works were created have gone unstudied. As a first step toward addressing this oversight in the voluminous discourse about Kim Sowo˘l, I survey ten periodicals in which the poet’s work appeared and identify many of the editors responsible for overseeing the translation of his poetic manuscripts into print. Identifying Sowo˘l’s editors illuminates the broader sociology of Korean colonial texts and enables new critical perspectives through investigations of the bibliographic histories of texts by canonical Korean authors.
IMMIGRATION AND IMPERIALISM: A NEW LOOK AT THE JAPANESE TAKEOVER OF KOREA
WAYNE PATTERSON 계명대학교 한국학연구원 2011 Acta Koreana Vol.14 No.1
While Japan’s perceptions of a security threat was the paramount reason for its takeover of Korea, a second reason surfaced that linked Korean emigration to Hawaii with a threat to Japan’s prestige as a leading nation in the world. Needing to prevent enactment of a Japanese Exclusion Act by the United States, the Japanese Foreign Office undertook to bring that emigration to a halt. Skillfully using missteps by the Korean government, Japan was able both to hide their ulterior motives from the United States and make it easier to absorb Korea’s diplomatic functions abroad, resulting in the establishment of the Protectorate in 1905.While Japan’s perceptions of a security threat was the aramount reason for its takeover of Korea, a second reason surfaced that linked Korean emigration to Hawaii with a threat to Japan’s prestige as a leading nation in the world. Needing to prevent enactment of a Japanese Exclusion Act by the United States, the Japanese Foreign Office undertook to bring that emigration to a halt. Skillfully using missteps by the Korean government, Japan was able both to hide their ulterior motives from the United States and make it easier to absorb Korea’s diplomatic functions abroad, resulting in the establishment of the Protectorate in 1905.
Creating a New Culture for Healing and Caring Environment
Wayne Ruga,이수진(역) 한국병원건축학회 2000 심포지엄 Vol.2000 No.1
"If we were gathered here, today, attending the World Congress on Environmental Design for the Last Millenium - 1000 years ago - we would all have seen creation of as environmental technology for which we could justifiably be proud. One thousand years ago we had begun to get masterful at the subject of enclosing space, supporting roofs, and protecting building habitants from the travails of weather and climate. Now, however, one thousand years later, in the year 2000 of the common era, let un pause for a few moments and consider the world that we have built for ourselves. My dear colleagues. please look around, Let us closely examine the legacy that we are in the midst of so diligently preparing for our ancestors. Please, with careful thought, consider this room, this building, this district, this city, this region, this country. Think about the buildings, the parking lots, the streets, the highways, the bridges, and the airports. Think about the gifts of Mother Nature. Once, not so very long ago, our ancestors were guests on her doorstep. In those days, our ancestors were completely surrounded by the work of Mother Nature. None of that which we have just so exquisitely considered existed."