Friday, March 13th, 2020 Making and Unmaking of the Speculative City: Urban Politics in South Korea + film screening of “Family in the Bubble

DateTimeLocation
Friday, March 13, 20209:00AM - 4:00PMSeminar Room 208N, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
Friday, March 13, 202010:00AM - 2:00PMSecond Floor Lounge, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7

Description

Symposium & Documentary Screening
Making and Unmaking of the Speculative City: Urban Politics in South Korea
For screening event info and tickets please go to: https://family-in-the-bubble.eventbrite.ca

March 13-14, 2020 (Friday-Saturday)

Friday Symposium: 9:30am-3:15pm
Saturday Documentary Screening: 2:15-5:30pm

This event is sponsored by The Academy of Korean Studies, York University’s Korean Office for Research and Education, Center for the Study of Korea (U of Toronto), School of Cities (U of Toronto), and Hope21.

March 13 (Friday) Symposium

Room 208N, North House, 1 Devonshire Place, University of Toronto-St. George campus

9:30-9:40 Welcome remark by Hyun-Ok Park (York)

9:40-9:50 Welcome remark by Yoonkyung Lee (U of Toronto)

9:50-10:00 Introduction to the Symposium: Hae Yeon Choo (U of Toronto)

10:00-11:00 Keynote Speech
Chair: Yewon Lee (U of Toronto)
Discussant: Hae Yeon Choo (U of Toronto)

Laam Hae (York) “Toward a Dialectical Vision of Planetary Urbanization: Ecological Pro-Greenbelt Movements against the Construction State in Korea”

11:00-11:15 Coffee Break

11:15-12:45 Panel 1: The Making of the Speculative City
Chair: Yoonkyung Lee (U of Toronto)
Discussant: Seung-Cheol Lee (U of Mississippi)

Hyun-Chul Kim (U of Toronto) “Juxtaposing biopolitics with speculative urbanisms: the development of private welfare/health institutions in South Korea”

Hae Yeon Choo (U of Toronto) “The Dictatorship of Capital: Urban Redevelopment and the Democracy of the Have-Nots in Post-Authoritarian South Korea”

12:45-2:00 Lunch Break

2:00-3:30 Panel 2 The Unmaking of the Speculative City
Chair: Hyun-Chul Kim (U of Toronto)
Discussant: Jesook Song (U of Toronto)

Seung-Cheol Lee (U of Mississippi) “Seeing like a community entrepreneur: The capitalization of ‘community’ in Seoul’s community building project (maul mandulgi)”

Yewon Lee (U of Toronto) “Precarious Workers in the Speculative City: Making Worker’s Power of Self-Employed Tenant Shopkeepers in Seoul through the Production of Space”

March 14 (Saturday) 2:15pm-5:30pm

Innis Town Hall, 2 Sussex Avenue, University of Toronto-St. George campus

Documentary Screening of Family in the Bubble and Panel Discussion

For screening event please go to: https://family-in-the-bubble.eventbrite.ca

Moderator: Michelle Cho (U of Toronto)
Panel: Yewon Lee (U of Toronto) and Hae Yeon Choo (U of Toronto)

Symposium and Documentary Screening Participant Bios

Michelle Cho is Assistant Professor of East Asian Popular Culture at the University of Toronto. She has published on Asian cinemas and Korean wave television, video, and pop music in such venues as Cinema Journal, the International Journal of Communication, The Korean Popular Culture Reader, and Asian Video Cultures. She’s currently at work on a book about gender, media, and fandom in Korean-wave popular cultures.

Hae Yeon Choo is an Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Toronto. She is an author of Decentering Citizenship: Gender, Labor, and Migrant Rights in South Korea (Stanford University Press, 2016), a comparative study of three groups of Filipina women in South Korea: factory workers, wives of South Korean men, and hostesses at American military camptown clubs. Her current research examines the politics of land ownership in contemporary South Korea, delving into macro-level political contestations over land rights, together with the narratives of people who pursue class mobility through real estate speculation. She has also translated Audre Lorde’s Sister Outsider and Patricia Hill Collins’s Black Feminist Thought into Korean.

Laam Hae is an Associate Professor in the department of Politics at York University. Her research areas are urban political economy, neoliberal urbanism and urban social movements. She is the author of The Gentrification of Nightlife and the Right to the City: Regulating Spaces of Social Dancing in New York (2012, Routledge), and co-edited On the Margins of Urban South Korea: Core Location as Method and Praxis (2019, University of Toronto Press). She is currently developing a research project that examines the spatiality of social reproduction and gender inequality in South Korea.

Hyun-Chul Kim is a PhD Candidate at the Department of Geography & Planning, University of Toronto. Her research interests include the varied degree of confined, segregated spaces in East Asian regions, from nursing homes to prisons, considering urban constructions, intimacy, and disability. She is writing her dissertation tentatively titled “Between Communal ‘Village’ and an Atomized ‘Home’: Blurring the boundaries of community organization movement and segregated-confined welfare spaces of South Korea in 1950s-1960s”.

Seung Cheol Lee received his PhD from Columbia University in 2018 and is now an assistant professor of anthropology and East Asian Studies at the University of Mississippi. His research interests are focused on the question of how neoliberal financialization has reshaped people’s social, affective, ethical, and political lives. He is currently working on a book manuscript that examines how the ethicality and sociality of gift-giving are grafted onto neoliberal market rationality in the social economy sector in South Korea.

Yewon Andrea Lee is a Korean Foundation Postdoctoral Fellow at the Centre for Study of Korea at University of Toronto. She is an ethnographer and urban and labor sociologist and received her Ph.D. from the Department of Sociology at UCLA. She is interested in speculative urbanism and how it generates new politics of dissent. In particular, her dissertation focuses on tenant shopkeepers whose livelihoods are disrupted by speculation on the urban spaces on which their shops stand and how these subjects organize via transforming everyday mundane spaces of work into symbolic spaces of dissent.

Yoonkyung Lee is an associate professor in the Department of Sociology and the director of the Center for the Study of Korea at the University of Toronto. She is a political sociologist specializing in labor politics, social movements, political representation, and the political economy of neoliberalism with a regional focus on East Asia. She is the author of Militants or Partisans: Labor Unions and Democratic Politics in Korea and Taiwan (Stanford University Press 2011) and numerous journal articles that appeared in Globalizations, Studies in Comparative International Development, Asian Survey, Journal of Contemporary Asia, and Critical Asian Studies.

Hyun Ok Park teaches sociology and the director of the Korean Office for Research and Education (KORE) at York University. With archival and ethnographic research, her research investigates global capitalism in colonial, industrial, and financial forms, democracy, socialism, and post-socialist transition. She is the author of Two Dreams in One Bed: Empire, Social Life, and the Origins of the North Korean Revolution in Manchuria (Duke University Press, 2005). Her latest book is The Capitalist Unconscious: From Korean Unification to Transnational Korea (Columbia University Press, 2015). She is completing a book manuscript, “A Sublime Disaster: The Sewŏl Ferry Incident and the Politics of the Living Dead.”

Jesook Song is Professor in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Toronto. Her research focuses on contemporary urban transformation and welfare issues, including homelessness, youth unemployment, single women’s housing, mental health in South Korea. She is author of South Koreans in the Debt Crisis: The Creation of a Neoliberal Welfare Society (Duke University Press, 2009) and Living on Your Own: Single Women, Rental Housing, and Post-Revolutionary Affect in Contemporary South Korea (SUNY Press, 2014), On the Margins of Urban South Korea: Core Location as Method and Praxis (University of Toronto Press 2019, co-edited with Laam Hae).


Speakers

Laam Hae
Keynote
Associate Professor, Department of Politics, York University

Yoonkyung Lee
Chair
Associate Professor, Department of Sociology, University of Toronto

Seung-Cheol Lee
Discussant
Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, University of Mississippi

Hyun-Chul Kim
Speaker
Ph.D Candidate, Department of Geography, University of Toronto

Hae Yeon Choo
Speaker
Associate Professor, Department of Sociology, University of Toronto

Jesook Song
Discussant
Professor, Department of Anthropology, University of Toronto

Yewon Andrea Lee
Chair
Post-doctoral Fellow, Centre for the Study of Korea at the University of Toronto


Main Sponsor

Centre for the Study of Korea

Co-Sponsors

School of Cities, University of Toronto

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