HARUKI EDA
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dissertation defense


TUESDAY 03.01.2022
1​2PM - 2PM EST
​FREE | PUBLIC | VIRTUAL
*Zoom info below


​Queer Korean Diaspora: An Ethnography of Geopolitics

​

​Limited empirical research exists on social movements among overseas Koreans, whose divergent experiences of migration and identity complicate the dynamics of ethnic solidarity. Besides the prolonged Cold War ideological division, Korean communities in Japan and the United States face alienation rooted in racial subordination and heteropatriarchal norms. In major U.S. cities, diverse Korean subjects gravitate towards grassroots organizing, including transnational adoptees, Zainichi Koreans (Koreans in/from Japan), and queer-identified individuals.

Existing sociological theory does not adequately explain the agency of such community organizers who negotiate differences and inequalities while seeking ethnic solidarity. I use the concept of queer diaspora to examine how geopolitical structures and discourses shape the embodied dimension of Korean ethnic community formation. I conduct ethnography of transnational Korean community organizing based on five years of observation from 2015 until 2020 in New York and San Francisco, including 25 in-depth interviews and archival research with five U.S.-based organizations.

My analysis shows how the organizers cultivate queer diasporic kinship by centering their alternative sense of place, time, and belonging. Their embodied practices animate ethnic community solidarity through what I call geopolitical healing, a process of articulating the sacredness of life and land. As a counter-hegemonic mode of ethnic mobilization, the queer Korean diaspora challenges liberal interpretations of sovereignty and nationhood that underscore the dominant discourse of Korean unification.

​Engaging with the literature on nationalism, social movements, and queer migration, my research draws attention to the spiritual realm of social life that manifest in a cultural ecology of spaces, bodies, and meanings.

​
INTRODUCTION
Queering Tongil

CHAPTER ONE
Geopolitics of Alienation

CHAPTER TWO
Diasporic Conjuring

CHAPTER THREE
Queer Korean Tenacity

CHAPTER FOUR
Sovereign Offerings

​CONCLUSION
Geopolitical Healing

​

attend

You can click the link below to launch Zoom - please do not click until the event starting time.

​https://rutgers.zoom.us/j/96886255652?pwd=a2RxcDF5NzFYTFR5T0tiWTZ4UXJsUT09

You can also call in:
​
+1 646 558 8656 US (New York)
+1 301 715 8592 US (Washington DC)
+1 312 626 6799 US (Chicago)
+1 346 248 7799 US (Houston)
+1 669 900 9128 US (San Jose)
+1 253 215 8782 US (Tacoma)
Meeting ID: 968 8625 5652
Password: 1 9 1 8 5 4

read

You can download the whole thing as a PDF. Please note that the final version to be submitted to the university will be a bit different.
Audience questions will be appreciated!
​
download pdf

celebrate

I am planning on celebrating big. Stay tuned!


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  • Home
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  • 日本語