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2011 7th KSAA BIENNIAL CONFERENCE
7TH K
SAA
BIE
NN
IAL
CO
NFE
REN
CE
THE KOREAN STUDIES ASSOCIATION OF AUSTRALASIA
(KSAA)
PROGRAMS
16 –18 November 2011
The University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia
Sponsors
Hosting Institution Korea Research Institute (KRI@UNSW), The University of New South Wales
KSAA 7th Biennial Conference Program 2
Foreword
The 7th Conference of the Korean Studies Association of Australasia (KSAA), hosted by
the Korea Research Institute at the University of New South Wales (KRI@UNSW), is
held as part of the Year of Friendship between Australia and Korea, in celebration of the
50th Anniversary of the diplomatic relation between the two countries.
The overall theme of the 7th KSAA Biennial Conference, “Korean Studies in the Era of
Global Partnership”, reflects and captures the critical need for collaborative research
networks among scholars of Korean Studies, who are scattered in different regions and
engaged in a variety of subjects. We hope that this conference will provide an opportunity
for scholars to present and discuss the outcomes of their research and develop a global
research network.
The first day of the conference (17th November, 2011) begins with Opening Addresses,
followed by a Keynote Address. The Keynote speaker, Emeritus Professor Kwang Chung
from Korea University, Korea, presents his paper titled ‘Foreign Language Education and
Foreign Language Teaching Materials in Korea: The Chinese Language Primer Nogoldae
(Lao Qida, "The Mr. Cathayan").’ In his keynote address, Emeritus Professor Chung
focuses on the traditional and historical development of foreign language education in
Korea. After the Keynote Address Session, three Concurrent Sessions are held. During the
Sessions, scholars present and discuss insightful aspects on Korea from a wide range of
disciplines including Economics and Management, Literature, Language Education,
Politics & International Relations, History, Linguistics and Society & Geography. The
first day of the conference is concluded with Conference Dinner & Best Paper Award
Ceremony.
The second day of the conference (18th November, 2011) begins with a Keynote Address.
The Keynote speaker, Professor Hyaeweol Choi from Australian National University
presents her paper titled ‘Going South: Re-orienting to Korean Studies from an
Antipodean Perspective.’ Professor Choi delivers a lecture on some strategic aspects of
doing Korean Studies in Australia within the context of greater interdependence between
KSAA 7th Biennial Conference Program 3
Australia and the region of Asia and the Pacific. During her keynote address, Professor
Choi proposes a transnational approach to the history of women in modern Korea. After
the Keynote Address Session, Day-2 Concurrent Sessions are held and encompass the
diversity of the discipline of Korean Studies, including Library, Media Communication &
Culture, Society & Geography, Politics & International Relations, Linguistics, Literature
and Language Education. The conference is concluded after the Biennial General Meeting
of KSAA.
On behalf of the Organising Committee, we would like express our gratitude to all the
participants of the conference, presenting their papers with exemplary intensity and
enthusiasm and contributing towards the success of the conference. We also gratefully
acknowledge the invaluable contributions of anonymous reviewers who have graciously
participated in the review process.
As the chair of the conference, we would like to document our wholehearted appreciation
to distinguished keynote speakers, Emeritus Professor Kwang Chung and Professor
Hyaeweol Choi. In particular, we would like to express our sincere gratitude to the Korea
Foundation, the Academy of Korean Studies, the Korean Consulate General in Sydney,
the Korea Research Institute of the University of New South Wales, and the Korea
Institute of the Australian National University for their financial and others supports to
this conference.
Last but not least, on behalf of all the conference participants, we are particularly grateful
to the KSAA Executive Committee Members for their wholehearted contributions to the
7th KSAA Biennial Conference.
Professor Chung-Sok Suh,
President,
Korean Studies Association of Australasia
KSAA 7th Biennial Conference Program 4
Organising Committee
KSAA Executive Committee
Professor Chung-Sok Suh (Conference Chair & President, KSAA)
University of New South Wales, Australia
Dr Young-A Cho (Vice-President, KSAA- Australia)
Monash University, Australia
Associate Professor Hong-Key Yoon (Vice-President, KSAA- New Zealand)
University of Auckland, New Zealand
Dr Ruth Barraclough (Treasurer, KSAA)
Australian National University, Australia
Dr Gregory Evon (Secretary, KSAA)
University of New South Wales, Australia
Dr Stephen Epstein (Newsletter Editor, KSAA)
Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand
KSAA 7th Biennial Conference Program 5
Timetable at a Glance
Date Time Details Venue
16 N
ov
(Wed
) 18:30 -
20:30
Welcome Dinner CURSA Restaurant Level 2, Mercure Sydney, 226 Victoria St., Potts Point
Hosted by: Mr Jin-Soo Kim Consul General of Korea in Sydney
17 N
ov (
Thu)
8:30 Registration
Lecture Theatre, Room M17 (Ground Floor), Chemical Sciences Bldg. UNSW
9:00 –
9:20
Opening Session – Opening and Welcome Addresses
Professor Chung-sok Suh, President, KSAA Professor Wai Fong Chua, Pro-Vice Chancellor, the University of NSW Dr Chung-Kil Chung, President, Academy of Korean Studies Mr Jin-Soo Kim, Consul General of the Republic of Korea, Sydney
9:20 –
10:10
Keynote Address – Day 1
Emeritus Professor Kwang Chung, Korea University
10:10 –
10:30 Morning Tea
Level 1 Foyer In Front of ASB 130 ASB Building, UNSW
10:30 –
12:00
Concurrent Session I
Economics & Management ASB 130
Lecture Theatre, ASB Bldg
Literature (1) ASB 232
Lecture Theatre, ASB Bldg
Language Education (1) ASB 105
Lecture Theatre, ASB Bldg
12:00 –
13:30 Lunch
Ivan’s Fernery Level 1, Roundhouse, UNSW
13:30 –
15:00
Concurrent Session II
Politics & International Relations (1)
ASB 130 Lecture Theatre, ASB Bldg
History ASB 232
Lecture Theatre, ASB Bldg
Linguistics(1) ASB 105
Lecture Theatre, ASB Bldg
15:00 –
15:30 Afternoon Tea
Level 1 Foyer In Front of ASB 130 ASB Building, UNSW
15:30–
17:00
Concurrent Session III
Politics & International Relations (2)
ASB 130 Lecture Theatre, ASB Bldg
Society& Geography (1) ASB 232
Lecture Theatre, ASB Bldg
Language Education (2) ASB 105
Lecture Theatre, ASB Bldg
18:00 –
20:00
Conference Dinner Level 6, Business Lounge, West Wing, ASB Building, UNSW
Hosted by Dr Chung-Kil Chung, President of Academy of Korean Studies, Korea
KSAA 7th Biennial Conference Program 6
Date Time Details Venue
18 N
ov (
Fri)
9:00 –
10:00
Keynote Address – Day 2 Lecture Theatre, Room M17 (Ground Floor) , Chemical Sciences Bldg. UNSW
Professor Hyaeweol Choi, Australian National University
10:00 –
10:20 Morning Tea
Level 1 Foyer In Front of ASB 130 ASB Building, UNSW
10:20 –
11:50
Concurrent Session IV
Library ASB 130
Lecture Theatre, ASB Bldg
Media, Communication & Culture (1)
ASB 232 Lecture Theatre, ASB Bldg
Society& Geography (2) ASB 105
Lecture Theatre, ASB Bldg
11:50 –
13:10 Lunch
Ivan’s Fernery Level 1, Roundhouse,UNSW
13:10 –
14:40
Concurrent Session V Politics & International Relations
(3) ASB 130
Lecture Theatre, ASB Bldg
Media, Communication & Culture (2) ASB 232
Lecture Theatre, ASB Bldg
Linguistics (2) ASB 105
Lecture Theatre, ASB Bldg
14:40 –
15:00 Afternoon Tea
Level 1 Foyer In Front of ASB 130 ASB Building, UNSW
15:00 –
16:30
Concurrent Session VI Society & Geography (3)
ASB 130 Lecture Theatre, ASB Bldg
Literature (2) ASB 232
Lecture Theatre, ASB Bldg
Language Education (3) ASB 105
Lecture Theatre, ASB Bldg 16:30
– 17:30
Biennial General Meeting of Korean Studies Association of Australasia Lecture Theatre, Room M17 (Ground Floor) , Chemical Sciences Bldg. UNSW
17:30 –
18:00 Closing Session & Best Paper Award Ceremony
KSAA 7th Biennial Conference Program 7
Papers and Presenters
Session and Session Chair
Presenter Papers
Concurrent Session I (10:30 – 12:00, 17th November)
Economics & Management (Chair: Youngok Kim)
Sooyoung Sul (Kyonggi University), & Moonjoong Tcha (Korea Development Institute)
Analysis of Leisure Expenditure and Policy Implications - Using Korean Urban Households Data
Sung-Young Kim (University of Sydney) Neo-developmental states in the twenty-first century: technological upgrading in the Korean telecommunications sector
Joseph Kim (University of New South Wales)
Interactive Relationship between Cultural Policy and Cultural Industry in Korea: Political and Economic Determinants
Paul Ahn & K Jacobs (Australian National University), Dong-Wan Lim (Dankook University), Kwang-Min Moon (Daejeon University)
Implementing Public Sector Accrual Accounting: Institutional Entrepreneurs in Korean Local Governments
Literature (1) (Chair: Ruth Barraclough)
Jeongsoo Shin (Korea University ) Ch’oe Ch’iwŏn and the Origin of Diasphora Literature
Steven D. Capener (Seoul Women’s University)
Making the New Newer The Influence of Western Literature on Modern Korean Literature: Yi Hyoseok, William Blake, and Walt Whitman
Kelly S. Walsh (Yonsei University) Bridging Disappointment: Pak Tae-won’s Kubo and James Joyce’s Ulysses
Language Education (1) (Chair: Duk-Soo Park)
In Jung Cho & Danbee Kim (Monash University)
Examining text segmentation in Korean Language Textbooks
Jin Hee Kim & Seung Kyu Han (Yonsei University)
A Study on the Current Status and Improvements of Describing Avoidant Words and Euphemism in Korean Dictionaries
Seong-Chul Shin (University of New South Wales)
Linking secondary schools with tertiary language programs: Current practices and feasibility for Korean
Jihye Eo (Yonsei University) An Evaluative Checklist for Teachers’ Books in KLT
Concurrent Session II (13:30 – 15:00, 17 November)
Politics & International Relations (1) (Chair: Bruce Jacobs)
You Ji (University of New South Wales) Hedging Opportunities and Crisis against Pyongyang’s Heredity Succession: A Chinese Perspective
Yee Pei K’ng (University of Malaya) The contributions of a middle power: Assessing South Korea’s role in ASEAN Plus Three
Amanda Anderson (University of Wollongong)
North Korea's representation of gender relations in the magazine Women of Korea
History (Chair: Hyaeweol Choi)
Minseon Lee (Australian National University)
Cross-Cultural Encounters during the Tonghak Movement
John Jorgensen Chan/Seon and a Goryeo ‘Continued Tripitaka’ Gregory Nicholas Evon (University of New South Wales)
Popular Religiosity and State Control: Rethinking the Foundations of Modern Korean Buddhism
Kenneth M. Wells (University of California, Berkeley)
“Retreat from Politics? Korean Protestant Leaders in the 1920s and 1930s”
Linguistics (1) (Chair: Young-A Cho)
Gi-Hyun Shin (University of New South Wales)`
Evaluative Language in Media Text: Examples from Korea
Yong-Ju Rue (University of New South Wales)
Gender differences in request strategies used by Korean and Chinese speakers
KSAA 7th Biennial Conference Program 8
Seung kyu Han, Soyoung Park & Yunjung Son (Yonsei University)
A Study of Numeral Unit Bound Nouns of Loanwords
Concurrent Session III (15:30 – 17:00, 17th November)
Politics & International Relations (2) (Chair: Changzoo Song)
Bruce Jacobs (Monash University) Key Events in the Democratisation of Korea and Taiwan: Comparing the Gwangju Massacre with the Kaohsiung Incident.
You-il Lee (University of South Australia) & Kyung-Tae Lee ( Toyo University)
Globalization and Economic Nationalism in South Korea: a Critical View
Steve Lok-wai Chung (University of Sydney)
Peace Movements in South Korea and Its Impacts on the Politics of the Korean Peninsula
Society & Geography (1) (Chair: Bronwen Dalton)
Hong-Key Yoon (University of Auckland) The Introduction of Formal Gardens as a sign of the Diffusion of Geomancy (pungsu) to the Korean Peninsula
Inshil Yoon (University of Auckland) A preliminary review of T'angniji manuscripts: with an emphasis on earlier forms
Joy J. Han (University of Melbourne) Damunhwa in Korean context: Multiculturals amidst postcolonial discourse
Andrew Bukuku Dyson (Academy of Korean Studies)
The Most Popular Model of Rural Developments in Africa and Asia: a Comparative Analysis of Ujamaa Villages Movement in Tanzania and Saemaul Movement in South Korea
Language Education (2) (Chair: Seong- Chul Shin)
Kyu-Suk Shin (University of Western Australia)
Implications of foreign languages curriculum reform for Korean program in Australian universities
Alan Libert (University of Newcastle) International Auxiliary Languages in Korea: Reception and Creation
Sin-Hye Nam (Yonsei University) A study on child words as educational vocabularies for multicultural families
Se Jung Seo (Yonsei University) Study on analyzing directive sentences in Korean textbooks -Focusing on analysis of linguistics and syntactic features in directive sentences fit in each level -
Concurrent Session IV (10:20 – 11:50, 18th November)
Library (Chair: Injung Cho)
Jung-Sim Kim (Monash University) “Korean databases in Australia–for whom, how, why?”
Darrell Dorrington (Australian National University)
Maintaining a world-class niche library support service in an economically challenging environment
Jung Ok Park (National Library of Australia)
“The National Library of Australia Korean Collection”
Media, Communication & Culture (1) (Chair: Stephen Epstein)
Jeong-ha Kim (Griffth University) The political impacts on Korean music education during the first period of Japanese colonial rule (1910-1918)
Chanchul Jung (University College, London)
Regulating, Exporting, and Defining Joseonese Cinema, 1934-1935
Roald Maliangkay (Australian National University)
“A Painter’s Dream Canvas: Korea’s Cinema Billboards”
Keum Hyun Han (University of Colorado, Boulder)
Contemporary Korean Photography:“How Artists Use a Photographic Sensibility to Produce New Knowledge?”
KSAA 7th Biennial Conference Program 9
Society & Geography (2) (Chair: Inshil Yoon)
Gil-Soo Han (Monash University) Fantasy and Aspirations: Identities of Young Korean Sojourners as Portrayed in The Melbourne Sky
Kyungja Jung (University of Technology, Sydney)
Helpless Victims?: Women’s autonomous organizing in Korean communities in Australia
Changzoo Song (University of Auckland)
Korea’s Desire for and Expectations from Ethnic Korean Brides from China and Uzbekistan: The Ups and Downs of Korea’s Ethnic Nationalism?
Concurrent Session V (13:10 – 14:40, 18th November)
Politics & International Relations (3) (Chair: You-Il Lee)
Yooil Bae (Singapore Management University) & Yong Wook Lee (Korea University)
Identity and Interest in Korea's Middle Power Diplomacy: A Case of Knowledge Sharing Program in Korea's ODA Policy
Joon Shik Shin & Bronwen Dalton (University of Technology, Sydney)
Harmonising International Development Efforts with Resource Diplomacy: Potential for the strategic use of ODA to Secure Lithium in South America
Roland Wilson (George Mason University)
Korea’s Forgotten, Intractable & Violent Conflict: When will Peace Finally Come?
Media, Communication & Culture (2) (Chair: Roald Maliangkay)
Jane Chi Hyun Park (University of Sydney) Remaking Gender, Nation and Identity: Transformations of the Female Body in South Korean Cinema
Joanna Elfving-Hwang (Frankfurt University)
Not So Soft After All: Kkonminam Masculinities in Contemporary South Korean Popular Culture
Stephen Epstein (Victoria University of Wellington)
“ ‘Where is Ronny?’ ” “Where is Rhonda?”: Contemporary South Korean Images of South Asia
J.P Park (University of Colorado, Boulder) What is “Korean” about Contemporary Korean Art? Cultural Differentiation and the Rhetoric of Identity
Linguistics (2) (Chair: Gi-Hyun Shin)
Mira Kim (University of New South Wales)
A systemic functional approach to the tangled thread issues of Korean Theme study
Duk-Soo Park (University of Sydney) The Grammaticalisation of –(u)l ke(s) in Korean
Young A Cho (Monash University) Is 'dae' the contracted form of the indirect speech constructions of 'dago hae'?
David Morris (University of New England) Some features of English as spoken by Koreans, and some features of Korean which influence them
Concurrent Session VI (15:00 – 16:30, 18th November)
Society & Geography (3) (Chair: Hong-Key Yoon)
Hyun-key Kim Hogarth (Royal Anthropological Institute)
Christianity and Chesa Rites in Korea
Sung-Ae Lee (Macquarie University) A Turning Point in Global Partnership: Representations of the Gwangju Massacre, 1980, and Attitudes to the USA Embedded in Film and TV Drama
Bronwen Dalton & Kyung Ja Jung (University of Technology, Sydney)
North Korea’s Informal Markets and the Increasing Role of Women
Literature (2) (Chair: Gregory Evon)
Ruth Barraclough (Australian National University)
Korean Kisaeng: Modernity, Femininity, Bonded Labour
Tatiana Gabroussenko (Australian National University)
Romance in North Korean fiction after 2000: new tendencies
Kyung Oh (Duksung Women's University) Reading Jaesaeng (Rebirth) and Sorekara (Thereafter) in the Context of the Family Relationship
Language Education (3) (Chair: Kyu-Suk Shin)
Maryna Solodka (Academy of Korean Studies)
The Effect of Retelling Activities on Pronunciation and the Complexity of Speech of Learners of Korean language
Hye Ran Hong (Yonsei University) A Study on the Patterns of Tense by Register Variation
Hyo Hun Park (Yonsei University) A Study on Pre-Reading Activities on Korean Textbooks for the Academic Purpose
Bong Jeong Lee (University of Technology, Sydney)
Korean jogiyuhaksaeng’s bilingualism and Korean language development in Australia
KSAA 7th Biennial Conference Program 10
UNSW MAP
Accommodation
Conf
eren
ce V
enue
Ch
emic
al S
cien
ces
Thea
tre
(M17
)
Wor
ksho
p Ve
nue
A S
B Bu
ildin
g
KSAA 7th Biennial Conference Program 11
Accommodation
Mercure Sydney Potts Point 226 Victoria St, Potts Point NSW 2011, Australia
Check in : 2.00pm. Check out : 11.00am
Travel along the Eastern Distributor from Sydney’s International Airport towards the city. Drive towards General Holmes drive onto Southern Cross drive and finally onto South Dowling street. Follow the signs towards Newcastle and Western Suburbs and continue onto Eastern Distributor Motoway. Take the exit towards Kings Cross and merge onto Williams Street. Turn right at William Street and left at Kings Cross road before reaching the hotel
Contacts
Tel : (+61)2/93971777 Fax : (+61)2/93971707 E-Mail : [email protected]
KSAA 7th Biennial Conference Program 12
Contacts
Professor Chung-Sok Suh (President, Korean Studies Association of Australasia) Executive Director, Korea Research Institute (KRI@UNSW), The University of New South Wales, Sydney, 2052, NSW, Australia Ph: (62-1) 9385-4466 Fax: (61-2) 9385-5622 Email: [email protected] Ms Clara Kim (Conference Administrator) Korea Research Institute@UNSW Ph: (62-1) 9385-3764 Fax: (61-2) 9385-5622 Email: [email protected]