120328 Korean Studies Grants To Support Scholarship, Research, Cultural Activities

Korean Studies Grants to Support Scholarship, Research, Cultural Activities

By Maryanne George
LSA Communications

U-M’s Nam Center for Korean Studies recently has received gifts and grants of nearly $2.9 million that will create new opportunities for scholarship, research and community engagement.

 

Undergraduate students Sun Hung Woo and Hye Seung Ryoo perform Sa-mool-nori during the Chuseok event, a Korean thanksgiving celebration. They are members of “Sinaboro,” a Korean traditional drumming group at U-M. The event was sponsored by the Nam Center for Korean Studies in October. (Photo courtesy of Mitch Park)

 Alumnus Woon-Hyung Lee, chairman of SeAH Group, Korea’s major steel pipe and tube manufacturer, will establish two $500,000 endowment funds: the Woon-Hyung Lee Korea Culture Fund and the Woon-Hyung Lee International Korean Studies Fund. The endowments will strengthen programs promoting cultural, educational and international experiences.

 The Woon-Hyung Lee International Korean Studies Fund endowment also qualifies for a $250,000 contribution from President Mary Sue Coleman’s Donor Challenge Fund.

In addition, the SeAH-Haiam Art & Science Scholarship Foundation, for which Lee serves as chair, will provide $10,000 annually for the next three years to support cultural activities and teacher-training programs.

Nojin Kwak, director of the Nam Center and an associate professor of communication studies, says Lee’s gifts continue a tradition of philanthropy.

“Like his previous gifts, Chairman Lee’s endowment funds will be utilized to strengthen the center’s programming on Korean culture, including collaborative activities with the University of Michigan Museum of Art,” Kwak says.

The Academy of Korean Studies also has awarded an Overseas Leading University Program for Korean Studies (OLUKS) grant to the center. This five-year grant of approximately $900,000 will strengthen the center’s scholarly programs and fund academic conferences and symposia on modern and contemporary Korea.

“This grant will provide students with fellowships as well as funds for scholarly programs in diverse fields, including communications, literature, art, culture, religion and sports psychology,” Kwak says.

A gift of $750,000 from The Korea Foundation will create the Korea Foundation Korean Language Program Directorship, providing the Korean Language Program (KLP) with organizational stability and programmatic leadership.

“Along with the significant growth of the enrollment in Korean language classes, the KLP directorship endowment puts the program on a promising trajectory,” Kwak says. “The Nam center will use its resources to provide students with an opportunity to learn the Korean language and more about the history and culture of Korea.”

The Nam Center for Korean Studies was launched in 1995 as the Korean Studies Program. Elder Sang-Yong Nam, a 1966 U-M graduate, noticed a lack of Korean art and literature at U-M when he arrived on campus in 1964. He began advocating for Korean language courses at U-M in 1984 and over the years became the center’s largest benefactor. In 2010 the center was named in his honor. He died in March 2011.

Over the years the center has grown to one of the leading Korean studies programs in the country. The center’s growth has been nurtured by donors and alumni from Korea.

“Donors from Korea have provided some of the most generous international gifts to the university,” says Peggy Burns, assistant dean for advancement in LSA. “This tradition of philanthropy is a tribute to Korea’s connection to the University of Michigan, dedication to education and the desire to share the culture, arts and literature of their amazing country.”

Credit: Maryanne George

Momma’s Source: Nam Center for Korean Studies

ii.umich.edu

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120328 A Clean Voice for an Advanced Nation: Singing in South Korean Christianity

A Clean Voice for an Advanced Nation: Singing in South Korean Christianity
March 28th, 2012

Host Department: Nam Center for Korean Studies

    • Date: 03/28/2012
    • Time: 04:00 PM – 05:30 PM
    • Location: Room 1636 School of Social Work Building, 1080 South University
      Nicholas Harkness, Assistant Professor, Department of Anthropology, Harvard University

  • Description:  
  • Further Information:This lecture focuses on the role of the voice in South Korean Christian culture. Drawing on ethnographic research conducted in Seoul’s Protestant churches and colleges of music, I explore the way European-style classical singing (songak) relates to certain idealized qualities of modern Christian personhood and national advancement. Among these Christians, it is claimed that the advanced nation is joyful, healthy, stable, and clean—and so should its voice be. I discuss both the aesthetics of sound as well as the ethics of bodily practice.

credit: Nicholas Harkness

Momma’s Source: Nam Center for Korean Studies

ncks.info@umich.edu

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120328 [Pics + Trans] Jaejoong and Yoochun Twitter Updates

Translation: Octopus panbroiling. It was delicious.

Credit: Kim Jaejoong @mjjeje

Translation: One Flesh

Credit: Park Yoochun @6002themicky

Momma’s Source: pic.twitter.com

Translations: worldlingo.com

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[PIC/TRANS] 120327 JYJ with Chile’s First Lady Cecilia Morel, Featured in a Chilean Newspaper

 [PIC/TRANS] 120327 JYJ with Chile’s First Lady Cecilia Morel, Featured in a Chilean Newspaper

March 27, 2012 · ceskjj

[TRANSLATION]

(Cecilia Morel) tells about how she met the popular guys and the first ladies in Seoul

Cecilia Morel Make-up Oriental Style and Meeting with JYJ 

Seoul. The second day of Cecilia Morel in Seoul transformed into a huge introduction to the korean culture.  During the second and last day of the Nuclear Summit, Morel had lunch with the first ladies. The lunch appointment was in the Blue House, seat of the government, that was built in Korean style. “We had to pull off our shoes to enter the house” said Cecilia, who had to put on special footwear.

She sampled the local food during lunch, and spent a lot of time with the korean first lady, Kim YoonOk, who was sitting right next to her .  The main event came after lunch, which began with a dance show with performers wearing traditional clothes. Later, Cecilia met JYJ, the most popular korean k-pop group who were in Santiago [Chile] in the beginning of March . ”I went to meet them and congratulated them. It was funny because two of them were very blonde, blonde, blonde, blonde. It was also funny because they look like Korean rock stars, and for me, that is something new and it catches attention” said Cecilia. 

(T/N; this is a rough translation; information unrelated to JYJ omitted )

++ Update++

The First Lady of Chile tweeted about JYJ:

[TRANS] At the First Ladies’ banquet in Korea, I was with JYJ
Photobucket

Credit: Lun via @ConnyAle_Nonnie + @ceciliamorel
Translated by: @Rasshie + JYJ3
Shared by: JYJ3

Momma’s Source; JYJ3

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120327 Song Seung Hun and Kim Jaejoong’s Drama will be Aired in May

Song Seung Hun and Kim Jaejoong’s Drama will be Aired in May

Actor Song Seung-heon’s drama “Time Slip Dr. Jin” will be aired in May.
“Time Slip Dr. Jin” is due to be aired after “The King 2 Hearts”. Officials told Sports Hanguk on a phone interview, “We were negotiating going in as a general service channel program but decided on MBC instead”.
“It is very likely that “Time Slip Dr. Jin” will come as a sequel to “The King 2 Hearts”.
Initially, “I Do, I Do” was the to-be line up while “Time Slip Dr. Jin” was in negotiation. While Kim Seon-ah was the favored actress for the drama, it showed likeliness in being postponed as it had difficulties in casting.
An official from the MBC drama department hinted, “Kim Seon-ah hasn’t confirmed. “I Do, I Do” is going through a hard time in completing the cast. Therefore we are looking at “Time Slip Dr. Jin” in May or June”.
“Time Slip Dr. Jin” is about the struggle of a doctor who travels back to the 1860s due to an accidentand realizes his duty and right as a doctor.
“Time Slip Dr. Jin” is based on a comic by Murakami Motoka and has already been drama-fied in 2009 in Japan.

Source :Soompi, from Nate and HanCinema

Momma’s Source: viki.com

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120326 [Pic] Yoochun Twitter Update

Very beautiful Micky. The sky is such a deep blue with just a hint of rose. So soothing….The ground and building  glows with green florescence…

Micky Yoochun: Only 2 hours of rest. The sky is peaceful–my heart is too..

 Micky Yoochun: Missing you

 credit: 6002themicky

Translation: translate.google.com

Momma’s Source: Twitter

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120326 Hallyu 2.0: The Korean Wave in the Age of Social Media Facebook Page University of Michigan Ann Arbor

Perspectives on Contemporary Korea Conference Series

Hallyu 2.0: The Korean Wave in the Age of Social Media

Home Program Participants Directions

 April 6, 2012
Rackham Amphitheatre, University of Michigan
Free and Open to the Public – No Registration is Required

Hallyu (the Korean Wave), a term coined to describe the widespread popularity and regional/trans-regional influence of Korean cultural products, has recently come into its own as a subject of academic inquiry and broad intellectual interest. However, while much attention has been paid to the impact of the Korean Wave on Korea’s national image or domestic economy, as well as its implications for transnational cultural flow, there has been little discussion about the impact of new communication technologies, such as social media.

Hallyu is indeed entering the new age of social media. For the last few years, Facebook, Twitter, youtube, cyworld, and myriad social networking websites have boosted the dissemination of Korea’s popular media contents to regions where the traditional media– theatrical distributions, TV networks, and DVD/VCD sales– had never reached before. Korean films, TV dramas and variety shows, online games, comics, and popular songs are now being shared, distributed and consumed in cyberspace at an unprecedented pace.

“Hallyu 2.0: The Korean Wave in the Age of Social Media” conference seeks to comprehend and interpret the meaning of this new and powerful cultural industry. The conference will stage interdisciplinary dialogues among scholars of cinema, media, and visual studies, and of area studies and communication studies, by implicating multiple approaches in deciphering the intricate web of contemporary media ecosystems.

credit: Nam Center for Korean Studies

Momma’s Source: ncks.info@umich.edu+Facebook

I was able to talk to the Conference Director who pointed me to the Umich Asian Studies Facebook Page.

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[INFO] University of Michigan Symposium on Hallyu 2.0: “OF THE FANS, BY THE FANS, FOR THE FANS – THE REPUBLIC OF JYJ”

[INFO] University of Michigan Symposium on Hallyu 2.0: “OF THE FANS, BY THE FANS, FOR THE FANS – THE REPUBLIC OF JYJ”

The University of Michigan will be holding a Symposium on the Hallyu Wave on April 6. One of the seminars offered during the 2nd panel is entitled: “Of the fans, by the fans, for the fans: The Republic of JYJ.”

YJ3 Note: Prof. Seung-ah Lee has presented the same topic at UC Irvine.  Event description is below:

The nationalist celebrations behind K-pop hide uncomfortable and troubled reality of the Korean entertainment industry. Far from being a paradise for aspiring young artists, SM Entertainment is a powerful industrial machinery that maintains complete control over the products it manufactures—the dancing and singing teenage boys and girls who are carefully marketed as “idol groups.” Prof. Lee’s lecture examines the JYJ fandom as an emerging social movement and analyzes both the mechanisms and logics internal to this movement.

Source: University of Michigan + University of California – Irvine
Credit: @Cecilia9095
Shared by: JYJ3

Momma’s Source: cassieslove.tumblr.com

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Trans] 120323 With Park Yoochun’s Acting in ‘Rooftop Prince’, Ratings are Two Digit Numbers

Trans] 120323 With Park Yoochun’s Acting in ‘Rooftop Prince’– Ratings are Two Digit Numbers

With the airing of two episodes of ‘Rooftop Prince’, it has marked a two digit rating from the audience. On the 23rd, according to the AGB Nielsen Media Research ratings, the episode of ‘Rooftop Prince’ that was aired on the 22nd received nationwide ratings of 10.5%. It seems the ratings had risen by 0.7% from the previous episode that was aired, which had had a rating of 9.8%. [omitted drama summary]

In this episode, Lee Gak (Park Yoochun) and his servants Song Man Bo (Lee Minho), Woo Yong Sul (Jong Suk Won), and Do Chi San (Choi Woo Shik) went through many ordeals as they tried to adapt to reality. When the 4 men tried to return back to their palace, they were chased by the police, and when they requested for food from convenience stores they were thrown in detention facilities. At the end of all the twists and turns, Park Ha (Han Ji Min) was faced with Lee Gak for the second time, and experienced things such as Lee Gak ordering the rice cooker to be gotten rid of after he heard sounds coming from it, and also how they all bowed down when she showed them a 10,000 won bill. With these moments of great laughter, the drama was well received by viewers.

Source: innolife
Trans+shared by: sharingyoochun.net

Momma’s Source: sharingyoochun.net

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120323 Yoochun’s Gift of Pictures with Captions on Twitter

Thank you Micky Yoochun for these beautiful pictures. Our prayers are with you too. We love you. Keep Fighting!!

 Addendum: Yoochun, there is much meaning in these cryptic messages. Life is rearing up into your face right now, and many decisions are looming ahead. Be brave, be strong–not in your own strength, for you have God to support you and to provide for you and your family. A portion of that support is in those of us who love you because you deserve to be loved. We will walk with you through this painful time. You have sacrificed much to gain this much ground and our job is to help you to hold that ground by giving our hands, hearts, and a portion of what we have been given. <3
                                                Momma Cha

 LIFE

Waiting

credit: @6002themicky

Momma’s Source: Twitter

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