|
|
|
HOME > BOOK SHOP > ECONOMICS, SOCIETY, GENERAL |
|
|
|
Acta Koreana: VOL.17 Number 1 June 2014 |
|
|
Price per Unit (piece): |
KRW 12,000
|
USD 8.34 |
|
Author: Academia Koreana Keimyung University |
|
Publisher: Academia Koreana Keimyung |
|
Pub. Date: Jun 2014 |
|
Pages: 521 |
|
Cover: Softcover |
|
Dimensions (in inches): 7.48 x 10.23 x 0.98 |
|
Language: English |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Editor’s Note
THEME ISSUE ARTICLES SENSIBILITY AND LANDSCAPE IN KOREAN LITERATURE AND FILM
Guest Editor’s Introduction By KIMBERLY CHUNG 1–4
Kim So-wŏl’s Chindallaekkot (Azaleas) as an Immersive Environment By WAYNE DE FREMERY and KIM JUSUB 5–27
Oriental Sublime: Sŏkkuram in the Japanese Imperial Landscape By HWANG JONGYON 29–60
Life and Landscape in the Utopia Stories of Late Chosŏn Yadam (野談) By LEE KANG-OK 61–83
Colonial Horrors: The Starving Ghost in Colonial Korean Mass Culture By KIMBERLY CHUNG 85–103
Mirror Play, or Subjectivization in 3 Iron: Based on Lacan’s Analysis of Las Meninas and His Optical Model By KIM SOH-YOUN 105–135
Beyond Vengeance: Landscapes of Violence in Jang Chul-soo’s Bedevilled (Kim Pong-nam Sarinsakŏn ŭi Chŏnmal, 2010) By MICHELLE CHO 137–162
ARTICLES
Chinul’s Hwaŏm Thought in the Hwaŏmnon Chŏryo By KOH SEUNG-HAK 163–191
Ancient Korean Mokkan (Wooden Slips): With a Special Focus on their Features and Uses By KIM CHANG-SEOK 193–222
A Study of Early Koryŏ Statues of the Great Monk Sengqie Excavated from P’an’gyo-dong, Sŏngnam City By KANG HEEJUNG 223–253
The Theory and Practice of Sage Politics: The Political Philosophies and Neo-Confucian Bases of Yi Hwang and Yi I By KIM HYOUNGCHAN 255–284
An Evolving Confucian Patriarchy: An Analysis of Wedding and Funeral Rites in Sixteenth-Century Korea By PARK MEE HAE 285–306
Discontinuity and Continuity in the Traditional Korean Judicial System During Its Modern Reform Period, 1894 to 1905 By DO MYOUN-HOI 307–338
The Confucian Background of Modern “Heroes” in the Writings of Sin Ch’aeho—In Comparison with Those of Liang Qicao By VLADIMIR TIKHONOV and YI HYE GYUNG 339–374
Conversion Novels and the Conversion Narratives of Kamsangnok in Colonial Korea By JEONG JONG-HYUN 375–397
“No Country for the New Woman”: Rethinking Gender and Cultural Nationalism in Colonial Korea through Kim Myŏngsun By RHEE JOOYEON 399–427
The Institute of Pacific Relations and the Korean Problem during the Pacific War By KO JUNG-HYOO 429–453
Genre Conventions of South Korean Hostess Films (1974–1982): Prostitutes and the Discourse of Female Sacrifice By MOLLY HYO KIM 455–477
The Cyber Bullying of Pop Star Tablo and South Korean Society: Hegemonic Discourses on Educational Background and Military Service By SHIM DOOBO 479–504
BOOK REVIEWS
Transnational Sport: Gender, Media, and Global Korea By Rachel Miyung Joo ROBERT OPPENHEIM 505–509
The Making of Korean Christianity: Protestant Encounters with Korean Religions, 1876–1915 By Sung-Deuk Oak PAUL S. CHA 509–514
The New Korea: An Inside Look at South Korea’s Economic Rise By Myung Oak Kim and Sam Jaffe DANIEL SCHWEKENDIEK 514–517
Rat Fire: Korean Stories from the Japanese Empire By Theodore Hughes, Jae-Yong Kim, Jin-kyung Lee and Sang-Kyung Lee KEVIN O’ROURKE 517–521 |
|
Airmail I (Smaller Parcel Post) Note: Not trackable. Since this is a form of general mail, deliveries do not receive a tracking number. While delivery costs are relatively inexpensive and customs passage is easier, the security of the delivery is somewhat lower. Packaging methods are applied that allow for opening according to regulations. Please be aware that Seoul Selection cannot be held responsible for items ordered that are lost during delivery. Only applies to packages weighing less than 2 kg. For boxes, no one side can exceed 60 cm in length, and total dimensions of length, width and height together cannot exceed 90 cm.
Airmail II (Parcel Post) Note: Trackable. However, inquiries about delivery status are handled manually rather than by Internet, and items are thus more difficult to track in comparison with courier services. Applies to packages more than 2 kg.
* Airmail I, Airmail II 7 ~ 20 business days for international delivery after order confirmation.
EMS (Express Mail Service) Note: Trackable and fast. This is the courier service of the Korean postal service. An international postal service that brings letters, documents and parcels to their destinations abroad using the fastest and safest means of transportation through a special agreement between the Ministry of Information and Communication and the postal services of other countries. Promptness: 143 countries, including Japan and China, can be reached in 2-4 days. Delivery Inquiries by Internet: EMS deliveries sent to major countries such as Japan, the United Kingdom and Hong Kong can be tracked and confirmed through a global computer network; delivery status is available upon inquiry. In case a computer inquiry is not possible, a quick inquiry by fax or post is available for reference upon the user's request.
EMS Premium Note: Trackable and fast. With EMS Premium, the Korean postal service handles TNT Express delivery services, providing a similar delivery period to other express services like DHL, FedEx and UPS, with slightly more affordable rates according to region. 1 ~ 3 business days for international delivery after order confirmation.
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|