特邀编辑简介

IF 0.2 Q4 AREA STUDIES Seoul Journal of Korean Studies Pub Date : 2024-01-10 DOI:10.1353/seo.2023.a916924
Jackie J. Kim-Wachutka
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The one-year conversation dedicated to \"Contemporary Zainichi Experience\" showcases a global positioning of Zainichi as an object of research that traverses numerous national boundaries, with collaborations from contributors and reviewers from Japan, the U.S., South Korea, Canada, Finland, Germany, Netherlands, Slovenia, Lithuania, England, Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, and Indonesia. Through a \"research imagination\" that \"allows people to consider migration, resist state violence, seek social redress, and design new forms of civic association and collaboration, often across national boundaries\" (Appadurai 2001, 6), this special issue is a fusion of voices by and about Zainichi. It demonstrates an inter-disciplinary, inter-area, and inter-regional merging of intellectuals, grassroots social activists, and <em>Alltags</em> actors whose collaboration is essential as a social force centering Zainichi within the realm of a global dialogue on colonial legacies of violence and displacement and postcolonial attempts at reflexivity, positioning, defining, and redefining of former migrants and their descendants. Within this special issue, an international broadening of knowledge production on Zainichi taps into a polyphony of scholarly works pertaining to the social sciences, literature, film, and art. Simultaneously, the short essays and poems contributed especially for this occasion, found in the appendix of this guest editor's introduction, depict as motif Zainichi and its future.<sup>3</sup> Alongside the main contributing articles, their voices are an ensemble of Zainichi from first to fourth generation, those of mixed heritage, Japanese, and \"newcomer\" Koreans. All contributions across multiple disciplines, expertise, life experiences, and backgrounds reveal the urgency of holistic dialogue at a time when, as Appadurai (2001, 14–15) emphasizes, the research subject has acquired international, transnational, or global dimensions of vital interest. Zainichi are indeed gaining recognition as a resilient ethnic minority once formerly colonized by empire, whose diversity and difference are not without steadfast connection to roots and community. The coalescing efforts at archiving their experience recapitulate the past of \"origins\" manifest in the present action of re-collecting and re-membering to lay hold of a future continuum. It is this critical moment that Zainichi share with diasporic peoples across borders, and this \"Contemporary Zainichi Experience\" is a way to create new forms of dialogue.</p> <p>The past—fleeting moments resurrected in memory. The present—unfolding <strong>[End Page 366]</strong> lived experiences foretelling what is to come. The time spans of past, present, and future are not singular temporal segments but are fluid and flow into each other's spatiotemporal dimensions. Zainichi within contemporary experience stems from the past, is lived in the present, and imagined for the future. Benjamin writes, \"For every image of the past that is not recognized by the present as one of its own concerns[,] threatens to disappear irretrievably\" (1968, 255). Zainichi stands at a threshold. It is upon this threshold that a sense of urgency attempts to take hold of a fleeting moment. We revisit Benjamin's proclivity towards the bygone that could never be completely historicized but instead \"becomes\" through what Khatib (2017) declares as a disruptive constellation of the present and the past. Benjamin, drawing on historian Leopold von Ranke, writes, \"To articulate the past historically does not mean to recognize it 'the way it really was'. It means to seize hold of a memory as it flashes up at a moment of danger\" (1968, 255).</p> <p>The past for Zainichi meant structural oppression, discrimination, inequality, and suffering both within the main society as well as within the ethnic community itself. But also within this tumultuous history incremental social achievements have been made and are continuously being fought for and achieved. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要: 特邀编辑简介 Jackie J.Kim-Wachutka (简历) (文章和诗歌由 SON-KATADA Aki、YAMADA Takao、SHIN Sugok、FUKUOKA Yasunori、KIM Seonkil、MUN Gyongsu、IJICHI Noriko、HONG Yeongok、Sehyong、KIM Sijong、CHO Yeongsun 和 FUNI 撰写)1 Zainichi:过去的记忆、现在的行动、未来的愿景--历史、社区、个人--研究、倡导、创造性地表达、表演和日常生活的学者、活动家、诗人、说唱歌手和普通人在本特刊2 上发言 [End Page 365]。为期一年的 "当代财一经验 "对话,展示了财一作为研究对象的全球定位,跨越了许多国家的界限,来自日本、美国、韩国、加拿大、芬兰、德国、荷兰、斯洛文尼亚、立陶宛、英国、澳大利亚、新西兰、新加坡和印度尼西亚的投稿人和审稿人都参与了合作。通过 "研究想象力","人们可以考虑移民问题,抵制国家暴力,寻求社会补偿,设计新的公民联合与合作形式,而且往往是跨越国界的"(Appadurai 2001, 6),本特刊融合了由 Zainichi 发出的和关于 Zainichi 的声音。它展示了知识分子、基层社会活动家和 Alltags 行动者的跨学科、跨地区和跨区域的融合,他们的合作作为一种社会力量是至关重要的,这种社会力量将 Zainichi 置于关于殖民遗留暴力和流离失所问题的全球对话领域的中心,以及后殖民主义试图对前移民及其后裔进行反思、定位、定义和重新定义的领域。在这本特刊中,有关扎伊尼族的知识生产在国际范围内得到了扩展,涉及社会科学、文学、电影和艺术等多领域的学术著作。与此同时,本特约编辑序言附录中专门为这一场合撰写的短文和诗歌,将财一及其未来作为主题加以描绘。正如阿帕杜赖(Appadurai,2001,14-15)所强调的那样,当研究课题已具有国际、跨国或全球层面的重大意义时,所有跨越不同学科、专业知识、生活经历和背景的文章都揭示了开展全面对话的紧迫性。作为曾经被帝国殖民统治过的少数民族,扎伊尼族的多样性和差异性与根基和社群之间并非毫无联系,因此,扎伊尼族作为一个具有顽强生命力的少数民族的地位正在得到认可。将他们的经验归档的凝聚努力再现了 "起源 "的过去,体现在重新收集和重新记忆的当前行动中,以奠定未来的连续性。这是再日人与散居在世界各地的人共享的关键时刻,"当代再日人的经验 "是创造新的对话形式的一种方式。过去--在记忆中复活的时刻。现在--展开的 [第 366 页完] 生活经验预示着未来。过去、现在和未来的时间跨度不是单一的时间片段,而是流动的,在时空维度上相互流动。当代经验中的 Zainichi 源自过去,活在当下,想象未来。本雅明写道:"过去的每一个形象,如果不被现在视为其自身关注的问题之一,就有可能无可挽回地消失"(1968 年,255 页)。Zainichi 站在一个门槛上。正是在这个门槛上,一种紧迫感试图抓住稍纵即逝的瞬间。我们重温本雅明对逝去之物的偏爱,逝去之物永远无法完全历史化,而是通过 Khatib(2017 年)所说的现在与过去的破坏性组合而 "成为"。本雅明借鉴历史学家利奥波德-冯-兰克(Leopold von Ranke)的观点写道:"历史地阐述过去并不意味着承认它'真实的样子'。它意味着在危险时刻抓住闪现的记忆"(1968 年,255 页)。对 Zainichi 而言,过去意味着结构性压迫、歧视、不平等,以及主要社会和民族社区本身的苦难。但是,在这段动荡的历史中,也取得了一些渐进的社会成就,并在不断地争取和实现这些成就。就像潮水的力量向外辐射和流动一样,扎伊尔人在自己的土地上也在不断地努力。
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Guest Editor's Introduction
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

  • Guest Editor's Introduction
  • Jackie J. Kim-Wachutka (bio)

(Essays and poems contributed by SON-KATADA Aki, YAMADA Takao, SHIN Sugok, FUKUOKA Yasunori, KIM Seonkil, MUN Gyongsu, IJICHI Noriko, HONG Yeongok, Sehyong, KIM Sijong, CHO Yeongsun, and FUNI)1

Zainichi: Past Memory, Present Action, Future Vision — History, Community, Person —

Scholars, activists, poets, a rapper, and lay persons who research on, advocate with, creatively express about, perform and everyday live Zainichi—the diaspora in Japan with roots on the Chōsen/Joseon (Korean) Peninsula2 speak [End Page 365] from the pages of this special issue. The one-year conversation dedicated to "Contemporary Zainichi Experience" showcases a global positioning of Zainichi as an object of research that traverses numerous national boundaries, with collaborations from contributors and reviewers from Japan, the U.S., South Korea, Canada, Finland, Germany, Netherlands, Slovenia, Lithuania, England, Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, and Indonesia. Through a "research imagination" that "allows people to consider migration, resist state violence, seek social redress, and design new forms of civic association and collaboration, often across national boundaries" (Appadurai 2001, 6), this special issue is a fusion of voices by and about Zainichi. It demonstrates an inter-disciplinary, inter-area, and inter-regional merging of intellectuals, grassroots social activists, and Alltags actors whose collaboration is essential as a social force centering Zainichi within the realm of a global dialogue on colonial legacies of violence and displacement and postcolonial attempts at reflexivity, positioning, defining, and redefining of former migrants and their descendants. Within this special issue, an international broadening of knowledge production on Zainichi taps into a polyphony of scholarly works pertaining to the social sciences, literature, film, and art. Simultaneously, the short essays and poems contributed especially for this occasion, found in the appendix of this guest editor's introduction, depict as motif Zainichi and its future.3 Alongside the main contributing articles, their voices are an ensemble of Zainichi from first to fourth generation, those of mixed heritage, Japanese, and "newcomer" Koreans. All contributions across multiple disciplines, expertise, life experiences, and backgrounds reveal the urgency of holistic dialogue at a time when, as Appadurai (2001, 14–15) emphasizes, the research subject has acquired international, transnational, or global dimensions of vital interest. Zainichi are indeed gaining recognition as a resilient ethnic minority once formerly colonized by empire, whose diversity and difference are not without steadfast connection to roots and community. The coalescing efforts at archiving their experience recapitulate the past of "origins" manifest in the present action of re-collecting and re-membering to lay hold of a future continuum. It is this critical moment that Zainichi share with diasporic peoples across borders, and this "Contemporary Zainichi Experience" is a way to create new forms of dialogue.

The past—fleeting moments resurrected in memory. The present—unfolding [End Page 366] lived experiences foretelling what is to come. The time spans of past, present, and future are not singular temporal segments but are fluid and flow into each other's spatiotemporal dimensions. Zainichi within contemporary experience stems from the past, is lived in the present, and imagined for the future. Benjamin writes, "For every image of the past that is not recognized by the present as one of its own concerns[,] threatens to disappear irretrievably" (1968, 255). Zainichi stands at a threshold. It is upon this threshold that a sense of urgency attempts to take hold of a fleeting moment. We revisit Benjamin's proclivity towards the bygone that could never be completely historicized but instead "becomes" through what Khatib (2017) declares as a disruptive constellation of the present and the past. Benjamin, drawing on historian Leopold von Ranke, writes, "To articulate the past historically does not mean to recognize it 'the way it really was'. It means to seize hold of a memory as it flashes up at a moment of danger" (1968, 255).

The past for Zainichi meant structural oppression, discrimination, inequality, and suffering both within the main society as well as within the ethnic community itself. But also within this tumultuous history incremental social achievements have been made and are continuously being fought for and achieved. Like a tidal wave the force of which radiates and flows outwards, Zainichi within the...

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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
11
期刊介绍: Published twice a year under the auspices of the Kyujanggak Institute for Korean Studies at Seoul National University, the Seoul Journal of Korean Studies (SJKS) publishes original, state of the field research on Korea''s past and present. A peer-refereed journal, the Seoul Journal of Korean Studies is distributed to institutions and scholars both internationally and domestically. Work published by SJKS comprise in-depth research on established topics as well as new areas of concern, including transnational studies, that reconfigure scholarship devoted to Korean culture, history, literature, religion, and the arts. Unique features of this journal include the explicit aim of providing an English language forum to shape the field of Korean studies both in and outside of Korea. In addition to articles that represent state of the field research, the Seoul Journal of Korean Studies publishes an extensive "Book Notes" section that places particular emphasis on introducing the very best in Korean language scholarship to scholars around the world.
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