Journal of Korean Religions vol. 8, no. 2, a special issue on Religion and Media in Korea, features the following articles by scholars.
Special Issue: Religion and Media in Korea
Guest Editors: Kyuhoon Cho, Sam Han, and Jin Kyu Park
In contemporary social life, religion and media cannot be said to be separated. Contrary to the long-lasting understanding that the two are independent from each other, the spheres of religion and media are closely intertwined. Dynamic and increasing connections have been observed and reported by a range of scholars. Indeed, the scholarly interest in the relationship is a fairly recent one. Only thirty years ago, religion was just a blind spot within media studies (Hoover and Venturelli 1996). Similarly, media were an overlooked issue in religious studies.
Special issue articles include:
- A History of Religious Broadcasting in Korea from a Religious Politics Standpoint: Focusing on the Period of a Protestant Broadcasting Monopoly
by Sungmin Lee - The Role of Newspapers in the Early Korean Protestant Community: An Analysis of The Korean Christian Advocate and The Christian News
by Minjung Noh - Religion in the Press: The Construction of Religion in the Korean News Media
by Kyuhoon Cho - The Culture-Religion Nexus: (Neo-)Durkheimianism and Mediatized Confucianism in Korean “Piety Travel”
by Sam Han - Authenticity, Brand Culture, and Templestay in the Digital Era: The Ambivalence and In-Betweenness of Korean Buddhism
by Seung Soo Kim
Research Articles
- Dens of Feudalism: North Korean Discourse on Confucian Academies
by Vladimir Glomb and Lee Eun-Jeung - The Debate on the State of Unarousedness between Oeam and Namdang
by Liju Xing and Xi Lin
Book Reviews
- A Korean Confucian Way of Life and Thought: The Chasŏngnok (Record of Self-Reflection) by Yi Hwang (T’oegye)
reviewed by Halla Kim - The Spirit Moves West: Korean Missionaries in America by Rebecca Y. Kim
reviewed by Kirsteen Kim
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About the Journal
The Journal of Korean Religions is the only English-language academic journal dedicated to the study of Korean religions. It aims to stimulate interest in and research on Korean religions across a range of disciplines in the humanities and social sciences. Launched in 2010 by the Institute for the Study of Religion at Sogang University in Korea, it is peer-reviewed and published twice yearly, in April and October.
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