TY - JOUR
T1 - Media, mobilities and identity in East and Southeast Asia
T2 - Introduction
AU - Edwards, Dan
AU - HO, Louis K C
AU - Choi, Seokhun
N1 - Funding Information:
This special section of Cultural Studies Review emerged from the Media, Mobilities and Identities in the Asia-Pacific conference, held at the University of Melbourne in August 2015 and organised by the Asian Cultural Research Network (supported by the International Research and Research Training Fund, University of Melbourne) in collaboration with Yonsei University, with participation from the Department of Humanities and Creative Writing at Hong Kong Baptist University. The editors would like to thank Professor Audrey Yue and Associate Professor Fran Martin of the University of Melbourne, Professor John Erni and Dr Chow Yiu Fai of Hong Kong Baptist University, and Professor Suk Koo Rhee and Professor Miseong Woo of Yonsei University, for making the conference possible and facilitating the travel of participating scholars.
PY - 2017
Y1 - 2017
N2 - This collection for Cultural Studies Review aims to address gaps in existing mobilities scholarship from two perspectives. First, while several articles here discuss the physical movement of various groups, the overarching focus is the complex interplay of mobile technologies and information on the one hand, and rapidly evolving formations of culture and identity on the other. Geographically, our focus is outside the ‘global north’, on a region that has perhaps been more dramatically transformed by physical, cultural and informational mobility than any other: East and Southeast Asia. Rather than taking ‘Asia’ as a category of cultural identity, this collection conceptualises the geographic region as a zone of cultural and political plurality, in which a vast array of migrations, imaginings, representations and discourses are constantly bumping up against political and cultural borders, as well as various state-sponsored and state-sanctioned ideas and images, in fascinating and often highly volatile ways. Topic covered in this collection include Hong Kong working holidaymakers in Australia (Louis Ho), literary narratives of overseas adoptees who have returned to South Korea (Ethan Waddell), online debates and conflicts between Chinese migrants and local Chinese-Singaporeans (Sylvia Ang), the politics of representing urban demolition and relocation in independent Chinese documentaries (Dan Edwards), the ‘glocalisation’ of Japanese anime culture in the online space in China (Asako Saito) and the representation of migrant worker experience in South Korean cinema (Sina Kim).
AB - This collection for Cultural Studies Review aims to address gaps in existing mobilities scholarship from two perspectives. First, while several articles here discuss the physical movement of various groups, the overarching focus is the complex interplay of mobile technologies and information on the one hand, and rapidly evolving formations of culture and identity on the other. Geographically, our focus is outside the ‘global north’, on a region that has perhaps been more dramatically transformed by physical, cultural and informational mobility than any other: East and Southeast Asia. Rather than taking ‘Asia’ as a category of cultural identity, this collection conceptualises the geographic region as a zone of cultural and political plurality, in which a vast array of migrations, imaginings, representations and discourses are constantly bumping up against political and cultural borders, as well as various state-sponsored and state-sanctioned ideas and images, in fascinating and often highly volatile ways. Topic covered in this collection include Hong Kong working holidaymakers in Australia (Louis Ho), literary narratives of overseas adoptees who have returned to South Korea (Ethan Waddell), online debates and conflicts between Chinese migrants and local Chinese-Singaporeans (Sylvia Ang), the politics of representing urban demolition and relocation in independent Chinese documentaries (Dan Edwards), the ‘glocalisation’ of Japanese anime culture in the online space in China (Asako Saito) and the representation of migrant worker experience in South Korean cinema (Sina Kim).
KW - East Asia
KW - Migration
KW - Mobility
KW - Southeast Asia
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85027324327&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.5130/csr.v23i1.5494
DO - 10.5130/csr.v23i1.5494
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:85027324327
SN - 1446-8123
VL - 23
SP - 60
EP - 68
JO - Cultural Studies Review
JF - Cultural Studies Review
IS - 1
ER -