IKS Lecture: Seungsook Moon, "Prefigurative Activism with Foreign Migrants: The Intertwining of Democracy and Neoliberalism in South Korea"

Seungsook Moon photo
November 20, 2024
2:20PM - 3:40PM
Hagerty Hall 145

Date Range
2024-11-20 14:20:00 2024-11-20 15:40:00 IKS Lecture: Seungsook Moon, "Prefigurative Activism with Foreign Migrants: The Intertwining of Democracy and Neoliberalism in South Korea" The Institute for Korean Studies presents:"Prefigurative Activism with Foreign Migrants: The Intertwining of Democracy and Neoliberalism in South Korea"Seungsook MoonVassar CollegeAbstract: During this talk, Professor Moon will discuss her new book, Civic Activism in South Korea (Columbia University Press, 2024) that illuminates complex ways in which neoliberalism simultaneously undermines and enables democracy in South Korea. The book demonstrates these contradictory interactions by focusing on three different types of “citizens’ organizations”: a large national advocacy organization run by professional staff activists, two medium-size local branches of a national feminist organization run by mostly volunteer women activists, and a small local organization run by volunteer activists with a focus on foreign migrants. This presentation highlights the last example of activism with foreign migrants. Democracy and neoliberalism are major keywords that convey aspirations, challenges, and problems of our era, as well as globally practiced modes of ruling. As many societies in the world have undergone neoliberal transformation not only in the economy, but also in culture and politics, this case study has global implications for how to assess our daily lives and how to envision a better world.Download the PDF flyer here.Dr. Seungsook Moon is Professor of Sociology at Vassar College. She is a political and cultural sociologist, scholar of gender studies, and Asianist specializing in South Korea. Her research interests include civic activism and citizenship; transnational militarism and military service; masculinities in neoliberal societies; and food, culture, & globalization. She is the author of Militarized Modernity and Gendered Citizenship in South Korea, and a co-editor of and contributor to Over There: Living with the U.S. Military Empire from World War II to the Present (both published by Duke University Press). Both books were translated into Korean and selected for the Ten-Books-Worth-Reading by the Korean Publication Ethics Commission (20007) and the list of Excellent Scholarly Books by the Korean Academy of Arts and Sciences (2017), respectively. She also received prestigious awards, including the inaugural endowed-chair visiting professorship (Sang-Kee Kim Visiting Professor of the Social Sciences) at Weatherhead Center for International Affairs at Harvard University (2014-2015) and Fulbright Senior Scholar Award (2004-2005). To balance her academic life, she has become an amateur Argentine Tango dancer.   Hagerty Hall 145 America/New_York public

The Institute for Korean Studies presents:

"Prefigurative Activism with Foreign Migrants: The Intertwining of Democracy and Neoliberalism in South Korea"

Seungsook Moon
Vassar College

Abstract: During this talk, Professor Moon will discuss her new book, Civic Activism in South Korea (Columbia University Press, 2024) that illuminates complex ways in which neoliberalism simultaneously undermines and enables democracy in South Korea. The book demonstrates these contradictory interactions by focusing on three different types of “citizens’ organizations”: a large national advocacy organization run by professional staff activists, two medium-size local branches of a national feminist organization run by mostly volunteer women activists, and a small local organization run by volunteer activists with a focus on foreign migrants. This presentation highlights the last example of activism with foreign migrants. Democracy and neoliberalism are major keywords that convey aspirations, challenges, and problems of our era, as well as globally practiced modes of ruling. As many societies in the world have undergone neoliberal transformation not only in the economy, but also in culture and politics, this case study has global implications for how to assess our daily lives and how to envision a better world.

Download the PDF flyer here.

Dr. Seungsook Moon is Professor of Sociology at Vassar College. She is a political and cultural sociologist, scholar of gender studies, and Asianist specializing in South Korea. Her research interests include civic activism and citizenship; transnational militarism and military service; masculinities in neoliberal societies; and food, culture, & globalization. She is the author of Militarized Modernity and Gendered Citizenship in South Korea, and a co-editor of and contributor to Over There: Living with the U.S. Military Empire from World War II to the Present (both published by Duke University Press). Both books were translated into Korean and selected for the Ten-Books-Worth-Reading by the Korean Publication Ethics Commission (20007) and the list of Excellent Scholarly Books by the Korean Academy of Arts and Sciences (2017), respectively. She also received prestigious awards, including the inaugural endowed-chair visiting professorship (Sang-Kee Kim Visiting Professor of the Social Sciences) at Weatherhead Center for International Affairs at Harvard University (2014-2015) and Fulbright Senior Scholar Award (2004-2005). To balance her academic life, she has become an amateur Argentine Tango dancer.

 

 

If you require an accommodation, such as live captioning, to participate in this event, please contact EASC at easc@osu.edu. Requests made at least two weeks in advance of the event will generally allow us to provide seamless access, but the university will make every effort to meet requests made after this date. 

This event is supported by a U.S. Department of Education Title VI grant to The Ohio State University East Asian Studies Center.