Thursday, June 22, 2017

film - So Long Asleep: bringing some of the 1940s forced laborers' mortal remains back to Korea

---[Pr. David Plath writes, 6/2017] 

So Long Asleep (60 minutes) follows an international team of East Asian volunteers as they excavate, preserve and repatriate the remains of Korean men who died doing slave labor in Hokkaido during the Asia-Pacific War. On the 70th anniversary of the end of the war we travel with them as they carry 115 sets of remains on a pilgrimage across Japan and over to Korea for reinterment in the Seoul Municipal Cemetery. Using a dark past to shape a brighter shared future the project offers an upbeat model for remembrance and reconciliation that could be adapted widely.
     The film and the repatriation project are featured in a 4-page special segment of the Spring 2017 issue of Education About Asia.
     See the DER website to view a trailer. Dialogue is in English, Korean and Japanese; in the DER edition the dialogue carries English subtitles. Separately, project participants have prepared editions with subtitles in Korean and in Japanese. For the Korean version, contact Professor Byung-Ho Chung (bhc0606at gmail) and for Japanese contact Professor Song Ki-Chan (kichans at hotmail).


An extended essay by Pr. Chung about the project appears in Asia-Pacific Journal; Japan Focus online magazine, as well, http://apjjf.org/2017/12/Chung.html



Saturday, May 27, 2017

radio story - DPRK female defectors

http://www.npr.org/sections/parallels/2017/05/26/528615440/defectors-reflect-on-life-in-north-korea


Saturday, February 25, 2017

Korean land, life, culture and language - book series in PDF

cross-posting from koreanstudies.com 2/2017
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The Center for International Affairs at The Academy of Korean Studies(AKS)is pleased to announce the publication of Geography of Korea, the seventhbook in the Understanding Korea series.



This work has been created to serve as a foundational text for international readers to understand the geographic characteristics of the Korean Peninsula and the living culture of Koreans. It consists of an overview that presents a comprehensive look at the Korean Peninsula from a systematic geography perspective and a regional geography portion that examines specific regions of Korea in greater depth.

https://intl.ikorea.ac.kr:40666/korean/viewtopic.php?t=5240


The Center for International Affairs, The Academy of Korean Studies
323 Haogae-ro, Bundang-gu, Seongnam-si,
Gyeonggi-do, 13455, Republic of Korea