Korean Diaspora across the World
Homeland in History, Memory, Imagination, Media, and Reality
Korean Diaspora across the World
Homeland in History, Memory, Imagination, Media, and Reality
Description
This edited volume brings together a wide-ranging account of the Korean diaspora, focusing on how “homeland” is understood, invoked, and performed in everyday life and public culture.
Spanning sites from Sakhalin and Japan to Chile, Kazakhstan, the United States, and Latin America, the contributors show how diasporic Koreans express belonging through family narratives, community life, and media, revealing place as layered and sometimes contested.
An opening reflection on migration through family history sets up two linked threads: one centered on lived experience – marginalization in Sakhalin, identity negotiations in Japan, cross-border families, food as cultural anchor, adoptee identity struggles, and generational questions in Chile – and another on public discourse, where newspapers, social media, and online communities shape diasporic self-understanding, from Koryo-saram identity and anti-Korean rhetoric to digital self-representation, platforms like MissyUSA, media-driven social capital, and Korean vlogging in Latin America.
Together, the essays present “homeland” not as a fixed origin but as an evolving construct, continually reworked through memory, communication, and social interaction.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
1 Looking at Koreans' Global Migration Path through the Lenses of Family History by Eun-Jeong Han
PART I: HOMELAND IN PERSONAL EXPERIENCES AND MEMORIES: IDENTITY NEGOTIATION AND CULTURAL ADAPTION AMONG KOREAN DIASPORA
2 Korean Diaspora in Sakhalin-“Your Homeland Does Not Need You but We Do” by Irina Balitskaya and Jae Hyung Park
3 Negotiating the “Homeland”: An Analysis of Narrative Identities among First-Generation Koreans in Japan by Min Wha Han
4 Families Beyond Borders: Discourse of Homeland, Diaspora, and (Up)Rooted-Identity by JongHwa Lee
5 Homeland in the Kitchen: The Intersection of Food and Diasporic Identity by Jaehyeon Jeong
6 Transnational Korean Adoptees and the Discursive Burden of Establishing Individual and Family Identity by Sara Docan-Morgan
7 The 1.5 and 2nd Generations in Chile: Am I a Korean? by Wonjung Min
PART II: HOMELAND IN PUBLIC DISCOURSES: MEDIA USE AND NEWS COVERAGE OF KOREAN DIASPORA
8 Identity Formation of the Korean Diaspora, Koryo-Saram, in Contemporary Kazakhstan: An Analysis Based upon Articles of Koryo-Ilbo by Jinhye Lee
9 “Trash to the Trash Cans, Koreans to the Korean Peninsula!”: Diehard Racism and the Rise of Hate Speech against Korean Residents in Japan by Soo-Hye Han
10 “I Am Korean American”: Constructing Diasporic Identifications on a Korean American Facebook Group and Pinterest Board by David C. Oh
11 Online Community for Information, Support, and Transnational Activities: A Case of MissyUSA among Female Korean Im/migrants in the United States by EunKyung Lee
12 Context Matters: The Effect of Homeland Media Use on the Generation of Social Capital among Korean Communities in the US by Sohyun Choi and Claire Shinhea Lee
13 Coreano Vlogs: Diasporic Media and the Politics of Asian Representation in Latin America by Benjamin M. Han
Index
About the Editors
About the Contributors
Product details
| Published | 07 Nov 2019 |
|---|---|
| Format | Ebook (PDF) |
| Edition | 1st |
| Pages | 284 |
| ISBN | 9798765184424 |
| Imprint | Lexington Books |
| Illustrations | 3 b/w illustrations; 23 tables |
| Series | Korean Communities across the World |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
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