Dear friends,

I am pleased to announce a thought provoking conference in which I pleasantly invite you to participate. iCat of Hallym University hosted a very interesting conference on Asian popular culture in Seoul with a title of "Culture Industry and Cultural Capital." As the conference proved to be a memorable occasion, we have decided to carry on the talk that we initiated. But this time with a larger and broader concern on the state of Asian culture and public sphere. Please read through the following information, and do accept my invitation. And please pass this call for participation to your colleagues and friends. Thank you.

Shin Dong Kim, PhD
Chair, Programming Committee of 2006 CSPS
http://www.hallym.ac.kr/~icat/




Cultural Space and Public Sphere in Asia

An International Conference

 

l        Date: March 17-18, 2006

l        Venue: Korea Broadcasting Institute, Seoul

l        Hosted by the Asias Future Foundation (AFF)

l        In cooperation with Institute for Communication Arts and Technology (iCat), Hallym University

 


PURPOSE

 

Asia is changing fast. From the dark memories of colonial legacy, Eastern part of the super continent has transformed itself to the most promising center of global economy for the twenty first century. Future reports of many kinds are generous in forecasting the continents bright days to come. The economic developments of China and India are much praised. Japan, Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Singapore are doing pretty well as usual. Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia, Vietnam, and the Philippines are also reshaping their outfits.

 

Economic developments of the region are not the only story that attracts our attention. Political and cultural changes are also quite remarkable. Many Asian countries were long parted from their closest neighbors in terms of cultural understanding and exchanges. They have linked closer to the former colonial empires or advanced West than their immediate border sharers. This is also changing. Cultural spaces in many Asian metropoles are wide opening to the Asian made ideas and products from pop music to films to television serials. Asia is also making itself a leading edge in making digital and mobile culture in the world. Highly complicated texting cultures of Tokyo and Manila, endless Internet enclaves developed in broadband Korea, and lucky number seeking Chinese mobile users are all shaping and reshaping the face of new media culture everyday.

 

Despite of all these hopeful progress, however, Asian politics and economy are not going without potential dangers and crisis. Political antagonism is still very alive among countries within the region. Economic rivalry sometimes pumps up a strong sentiment of competition against one another than the mood of peaceful co-existence. Futures of Asian societies are still more often than not decided by the outside friends than Asians themselves. Asian societies seem to in need of creating a more stable sphere of public concern and discussion on a transnational level. This conference intends to contribute to the vitalization of various academic discourses on the cultural spaces and public sphere of Asia. It is meant to be more than a sequel of the one that we hosted last year with the title of Culture Industry and Cultural Capital in Seoul. If the CICC was narrowly casting its focus on pop culture and the Korean wave, the current project eyes on a broader range including popular and media culture. The conference should serve for our better understanding on Asian popular culture and also for building spheres of public discussion.

 

TOPICS

 

l        Spaces of Asian popular culture

l        Cultural hybridization and fusion in Asia

l        Creating/constructing Asian public spheres

l        Transnational Asian popular culture

l        Films and televisions of trans-Asia

l        Digital, mobile, and Internet cultures in Asia

l        Changing images of the West in Asian minds

l        Consuming Asia and Asian media

l        Korean wave: present and future

l        Pro- and anti-sentiments to the Korean wave

l        Cultural capital and productivity of popular culture
And other related issues

 

TIMELINE and SUPPORT

 

l        One-page abstract with authors’ brief bio deadline: January 31, 2006 (or the sooner the better)

l        Paper deadline: February 28, 2005 

l        Selected presentations will receive partial amount of support either for travel or accommodation.

l        All submissions and correspondence should be directed to Shin Dong KIM at [EMAIL PROTECTED].


Contact:

 

Shin Dong KIM, PhD

Director, Institute for Communication Arts and Technology (iCat)
Associate Professor, School of Communication, Hallym University
Board Member, Asias Future Foundation
Chair, Programming Committee of the CSPS conference
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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