Friday, January 26th: Sandra Park “Crusading for the Twentieth Century: Christianity, Chaplaincy and Militarism in Cold War South Korea, 1945-1973”

Sandra Park

“Crusading for the Twentieth Century: Christianity, Chaplaincy and Militarism in Cold War South Korea, 1945-1973”

Friday, January 26th, 3-5 p.m.
Location: CEAS 319 (1155 E. 60th St.)
Co-sponsored with the Arts and Politics of East Asia Workshop

Discussant: Jun-Hee Lee (PhD Candidate, History)
This Friday, East Asia Transregional Histories Workshops and Arts and Politics of East Asia workshops are proud to host Sandra Park (PhD Student, History). She will be presenting a draft of her dissertation proposal, which she summarizes as follows:
My anticipated dissertation, “Crusading for the Twentieth Century: Christianity, Chaplaincy and Militarism in Cold War South Korea, 1945-1973,” elucidates the origins of Christianity’s increasing social and political influence from the Korean War (1950-1953) through 1973, when the Billy Graham Seoul Crusade attracted over three million people (the largest gathering in global Church history). Two decades before the Seoul Crusade, Graham visited American GIs and Korean Christians during the Korean War in 1952. At the time, wŏllam (those who went south) Korean Christian leaders like Han Kyung-Chik (who interpreted for Graham) and Hwang Ŭn-gyun articulated the conflict with communism in North Korea in eschatological language, invoking the imagery of medieval European crusades. My proposal engages the trope of “crusades” articulated during the Korean Cold War as reflective of the ways in which Christianity and militarism were folded into each other. At this stage, I expect to trace three currents that were formative to the relationship between Christianity and militarized politics in Cold War South Korea: the discursive, transpacific politics of Billy Graham and Han Kyung-Chik (1945-1950), the institutional history of the Republic of Korea (ROK) military chaplaincy from its inception in 1951, and the hegemonic culture of militarism and dissent.

Sandra’s paper can be found in the post below.

As always, first-time attendees are welcome. Please make note of the distinct time and location for this event.

 

Paride Stortini 1/28

East and West of the Tsukiji Honganji
Travel and the Construction of a Japanese Modern Buddhist Temple
Link to Paper: Paride Stortini

Copyright Hirohide Nakahashi https://www.flickr.com/photos/guicho04/8241265610

Speaker: Paride Stortini (PhD Student, Department of Divinity at the University of Chicago), presenting:

Date/Time: Thursday, January 28, 4:15 to 6:00 pm

Venue:  John Hope Franklin Room (SSRB), Room 224

11/19 Dan Knorr – Joint Session w/ Human Rights Workshop

Placing the American State in the Interior of China: The Jinan Missionary Case, 1881-1891

1893PCUSMissionaries-Korea350w

Speaker: Dan Knorr (PhD Student, Department of History, University of Chicago)

Discussant: Evelyn Atkinson (PhD Student, Department of History, University of Chicago)

Date/Time: November 19, 4:15 to 6:00pm

Venue: John Hope Franklin Room (Social Science Research Building, 224)

Paper: Knorr Placing the American State

Micah Auerback

 

Presenter: Micah Auerback
(Asssitant Professor, Asian Languages and Cultures, University of Michigan)


Title: Painting the Biography of the Buddha in Meiji Japan

Date and Time: 12/13 on Friday, 4-6pm
Venue:
Cochrane-Woods Art Center 152

Southern Song dynasty artist Liang Kai’s _Śākyamuni Descending the Mountain_ that is compared with Yamamoto Shunkyo's one in Meiji Japan (Tokyo, Japan, Tokyo National Museum).

Southern Song dynasty artist Liang Kai’s _Śākyamuni Descending the Mountain_ that is compared with Yamamoto Shunkyo’s one in Meiji Japan (Tokyo, Japan, Tokyo National Museum).