Limit search to available items
Book Cover
E-book

Title Queer Korea / [edited by] Todd A. Henry
Published Durham : Duke University Press, 2020

Copies

Description 1 online resource
Series Perverse modernities
Contents Queer Korea: toward a field of engagement / todd A. Henry -- Unruly subjects under colonial and postcolonial modernity. Ritual specialists in colonial drag: Shamanic interventions in 1920s Korea / Merose Hwang -- Telling queer time in a straight empire: Yi Sang's "Wings" (1936) / John Whittier Treat -- Problematizing love: the intimate event and same-sex love in colonial Korea / Pei Jean Chen -- Femininity under the wartime system and the symptomacity of female same-sex love / Shin-ae Ha (translated by Kyunghee Eo) -- A female-dressed man sings a national epic: the film Male Kisaeng and the politics of gender and sexuality in 1960s South Korea / Chung-kang Kim -- Queer lives as cautionary tales: female homoeroticism and the heteropatriarchal imagination of authoritarian South Korea / Todd A. Henry -- Citizens, consumers, soldiers, and activists in postauthoritarian times. The three faces of South Korea's male homosexuality: Pogal, Iban and neoliberal gay / John (Song Pae) Cho -- Avoiding t'ibu (obvious butchness): invisibility as a survival strategy among young queer women in South Korea / Layoung Shin -- Ripples of trauma: queer bodies and the temporality of violence in the South Korean military / Timothy Gitzen -- Mobile numbers and gender transitions: the resident registration system, the nation-state, and trans/gender identities / Ruin (translated by Max Balhorn)
Summary "In the past 30 years, discourses on queerness and the central political issues of LGBT life that originate in the United States-- like same-sex marriage-- have been exported and used to identify the presence of queer community in other parts of the world. QUEER KOREA brings together historical, ethnographic, and literary essays that establish a queer historiography of Korea. Editor Todd Henry asserts that Western forms of queerness, and the reading practices used to identify queerness in the American academy, are insufficient to describe the range of queer life on the Korean peninsula. He argues that particular developments in Korean modernity-- including its histories of colonialism, nationalism, and authoritarianism from the turn of the century to the Cold War-- have informed the language and politics of queerness in Korea and the Korean diaspora. In addition to compiling the first volume focused on queerness in Korea, including work from the South Korean academy, this volume asserts that placing queerness at the center of Korean studies, rather than at the margins, produces new analytic possibilities for the field. The chapters are divided into three parts. The chapters in Part I, "Unruly Subjects and Colonial Modernity," trace the origins of queer subjectivity in modern Korea through political struggles against Japanese colonial rule, and anti-communist/anti-capitalist conflict during the Korean War. In one chapter John Treat reads scenes of migration between a colonized satellite city in Korea to the center of Japanese imperialism in Tokyo in modernist writer Yi Sang's short story "Wings." Drawing on José Esteban Muñoz's concepts of utopia and disidentification, Treat argues that Yi's characters and prose both move between Japanese colonial and Korean nationalist forms of power in ways that assert the queerness of the colonial subject. Part II, "Gender, Kinship, and Nation Under Cold War," includes chapters that link geopolitical shifts during the Cold War to emergent forms of gender and sexual variance in Korean popular culture. Kim Chung-kang's essay looks at how the trope of male cross-dressing in South Korean B-movies developed as a critical response to a resurgence of family-centered, patriarchal politics under Park Chung Hee's authoritarian government. She argues that this form of non-binary representation constituted critical refusal of hegemonic politics in a moment when Korea's mass culture was highly regulated. In Part III, "Consumer, Soldier, and Citizen in Post-Authoritarian Times," essays examine contemporary forms of queer expression in Korea and the Korean diaspora. In one essay Timothy Gitzens examines how extensive efforts to identify and relegate gay men in Korea's military reinforce how ideas of nationhood and masculinity converge in South Korea's system of compulsory military service. Gitzens argues that the military's anti-gay surveillance tactics foment a kind of toxic masculinity that transfers anti-gay violence from service to civilian life in a traumatic cycle. This edited collection will be of interest to readers in Asian studies, gender and sexuality studies, and queer studies"-- Provided by publisher
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Subject Homosexuality -- Korea (South)
Sexual minorities -- Korea (South)
Gay people -- Korea (South)
Lesbians -- Korea (South)
Homosexuality -- Korea
Sexual minorities -- Korea
Gay people -- Korea
Lesbians -- Korea
History -- Asia -- Korea.
Gay people
Homosexuality
Lesbians
Sexual minorities
Korea
Korea (South)
Form Electronic book
Author Henry, Todd A., 1972-
ISBN 9781478001928
1478001925
9781478002901
1478002905
9781478003366
1478003367