Essays [among many other links]
A Short History of Korean Film by Darcy Paquet
A History of Korean Animation (Part One · Part Two) by Tom Giammarco
A Book Review of Contemporary Korean Cinema by Adam Hartzell
A Book Review of Im Kwon-taek by Adam Hartzell
Censorship in Korean Cinema, 1995-2002 by Darcy Paquet
Film Awards Ceremonies in Korea by Darcy Paquet
Going to the Movies in Korea by Darcy Paquet
Japanese Films in Korea by Darcy Paquet
South Korean Films about the Korean War by Darcy Paquet
Details and Decomposition: On Hong Sang-soo by Adrien Gombeaud
My Moments With Hong by Adam Hartzell
Notes from the Hong Sang-soo Retrospective by Adam Hartzell
Soojung Attends the Monster's Ball by Adam Hartzell
Yu Hyun-mok's School Excursion (1969) by Darcy Paquet
It Hurts: An Essay on Kim Ki-duk's The Isle by Larisa & Leonid Alekseychuk
On Yu Ha's Once Upon a Time in High School by Paolo Bertolin
Park Chan-wook's World of Personal Introspection by Boris Trbic
The Top Ten Korean Films of the 1990s by Darcy Paquet
Genrebending in Contemporary Korean Cinema by Darcy Paquet
Netizen Funds by Darcy Paquet
The People's Cinema by Timothy Savage
How to Start Your Own Film Festival by Michelle Svenson
New Old Men and Old New Men by Adam Hartzell
Essays from the Far East Film Festival by Darcy Paquet
Delays in Celluloid by Chris Stults
Wednesday, November 12, 2008
Thursday, September 18, 2008
Royal Asiatic Society-Korea, LINKS
http://www.raskb.com >Links to Other Organizations
1StopKorea Korea Information Service
Life in Korea Korea Lore KNTO
1StopKorea Korea Information Service
Life in Korea Korea Lore KNTO
links at Library of Congress
http://www.loc.gov/rr/international/asian/korea/korea.html
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100th Anniversary of Korean Immigration
General Resources
Business, Commerce, Economy
Culture
Education
Embassies
Genealogy
Geography
Government, Politics, Law
Health
History
Language and Literature
Libraries, Archives
Listservs, Newsgroups
Media and Communications
National Security
Organizations
Recreation and Travel
Religion and Philosophy
Society
Science and Technology
Search Engines
Unification
Korean American Studies
100th Anniversary of Korean Immigration
Thursday, July 24, 2008
Korean Traditional Music sampler
PDF file with liner notes for 21 selected tracks; click the play button to hear the excerpts - permission received to use for educational, non-commercial purposes
http://koreanstudies08.googlepages.com/kr-trad-music.zip (about 4 megabytes)
http://koreanstudies08.googlepages.com/kr-trad-music.zip (about 4 megabytes)
Friday, April 4, 2008
Koreans brought to Japan during the Pacific War
English translation of Kangsangjung's Memories of a Zainichi Korean Childhood,
Wednesday, March 12, 2008
audio links
April 29, 2006 Poets House New York City - Readings and conversation with two of the leading Korean writers of the postwar period, novelist Hwang Sok-Yong and poet Ko Un; moderated by Janet Poole. http://www.pen.org/audio_archive/2006_world_voices/Hwang_Ko.mp3
Tuesday, March 11, 2008
experience of Confucianism at home
from Lee, Chang-Rae (1995, Riverhead Books) Native Speaker, page 6.
...My father, a Confucian of high order... For him, all of life was a rigid matter of family. I know all about that fine and terrible ordering, how it variously casts you as the golden child, the slave-son or daughter, the venerable father, the long-dead god. But I know, too, of the basic comfort in this familial precision, where the relation abides no argument, no questions or quarrels. The truth, finally, is who can tell it.
page 137... it was clearly Kwang's Confucian training at work, his secular religion of pure hierarchy, his belief that everyone is at once a noble and a servant and then just a man. Its adherents know no hubris. Instead this: you simply bow down before those who would honor you. You honor them back. For you are but ash to their fire. All spent of light.
page 277... [folksong] it's the same register my mother used to hum while doing the housework, a languourous baritone, the most Korean range, low enough for our gut of sadness, high for the wonder of chance, good luck.
page 278... I say to him, "Korean stories always work like that. Everbody dies but one. And the one has little to live for."
"But somehow he lives," John says. "The one goes one. We're too stubbborn."
"I think we're too brave and too blind," I answer... "I read that Korean nationals are the most rescued people from the world's mountaintops."
...My father, a Confucian of high order... For him, all of life was a rigid matter of family. I know all about that fine and terrible ordering, how it variously casts you as the golden child, the slave-son or daughter, the venerable father, the long-dead god. But I know, too, of the basic comfort in this familial precision, where the relation abides no argument, no questions or quarrels. The truth, finally, is who can tell it.
page 137... it was clearly Kwang's Confucian training at work, his secular religion of pure hierarchy, his belief that everyone is at once a noble and a servant and then just a man. Its adherents know no hubris. Instead this: you simply bow down before those who would honor you. You honor them back. For you are but ash to their fire. All spent of light.
page 277... [folksong] it's the same register my mother used to hum while doing the housework, a languourous baritone, the most Korean range, low enough for our gut of sadness, high for the wonder of chance, good luck.
page 278... I say to him, "Korean stories always work like that. Everbody dies but one. And the one has little to live for."
"But somehow he lives," John says. "The one goes one. We're too stubbborn."
"I think we're too brave and too blind," I answer... "I read that Korean nationals are the most rescued people from the world's mountaintops."
Saturday, February 23, 2008
Monday, January 28, 2008
blog about learning Korean
discovered when searching ["cultural literacy" Korean]
http://koreanlanguagenotes.blogspot.com (gerry bevers@gmail)
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