Duke Scholarly Works
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Browsing Duke Scholarly Works by Affiliation "Asian and Middle Eastern Studies"
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Item Open Access A (Meta)commentary on Western Literary Theories in China: The Case of Jameson and Chinese Jamesonism(Modern Language Quarterly, 2018-09-01) Kang, LiuItem Open Access Item Open Access Aesthetics and Marxism (Chinese translation)(2012) Liu, KItem Open Access American Freedom and Islamic Fascism: Ideology in the Hall of Mirrors(Theory and Event, 2011-09) McLarney, Ellen AnneItem Open Access Anaphor Reconstruction in Thai Relative ClausesChen, YunchuanItem Open Access Anti-Japan: The Politics of Sentiment in Postcolonial East Asia(2019) Ching, LeoItem Open Access Beyoncé’s Soft Power(Camera Obscura: Feminism, Culture, and Media Studies, 2019-09-01) McLarney, EThis article charts Beyoncé’s multimedia intervention into the politics of the Trump presidency as she draws on the work of black Muslim and Latinx artists to challenge white monopolies on representation in the Breitbart era. It specifically looks at the political interventions Beyoncé staged through collaborations with Warsan Shire, a British poet born in Kenya to Somali parents; Awol Erizku, an Ethiopian-born American artist raised in the Bronx; and Daniela Vesco, a Costa Rican photographer. This collective of artists forge a black aesthetics at a heightened level of visibility, using new performative technologies to intervene in the politics of #BlackLivesMatter, crackdowns on Muslim and Latinx refugees and immigrants, the proposed wall with Mexico, and neo-Nazi mobilization. Focusing on Beyoncé’s pregnancy announcement, the article explores the politics of representation of black bodies and black lives, as she transforms the trope of suffering black mothers and their martyred black youth into a celebration of black motherhood and the pregnant body. These images are consciously rooted in a genealogy of black women’s representations of black women’s bodies. Despite the political power of these interventions, accusations were leveled at Beyoncé of cultural appropriation and exploitation of suffering by the neoliberal entertainment machine. By mentoring these artists, Beyoncé sought to convey the fertility of creative foment across borders and power hierarchies, even if her star power ultimately eclipsed the message as well as the marginalized artist that she sought to highlight.Item Open Access Burqa in Vogue: Fashioning Afghanistan(Journal of Middle East Women's Studies, 2009-12) McLarney, Ellen AnneItem Open Access Burqa in Vogue: Fashioning Afghanistan(Journal of Middle East Women's Studies, 2009-12) McLarney, EllenItem Open Access China's Rise through World Public Opinion: Editorial Introduction(Journal of Contemporary China, 2015-03-04) Kang, Liu; Chu, Yun-HanItem Open Access China's Soft Power and Media Culture(Literature and Arts Studies, 2010-07) Liu, KItem Open Access Commentary(Heritage Language Journal, 2008) Kim, HItem Open Access “Connections” for developing cultural content in Korean language curriculum 한국어 교육과 문화 교수의 연계(The proceedings of the 25th International Conference on Korean Language Education, 2015) Kim, Hae-YoungItem Metadata only “Connections” for developing cultural content in Korean language curriculum 한국어 교육과 문화 교수의 연계(The proceedings of the 25th International Conference on Korean Language Education, 2015) Kim, HItem Open Access Content-Based Language Teaching: A model for bridging with Korean Studies [In Korean] (한국학과의 접목을 위한 내용 중심 한국어 교육)(The proceedings of the 21st International Conference on Korean Language Education, 2011) Kim, Hae-YoungItem Open Access Development of Aspect Morphology in Korean(Journall of Language Science, 2016) Kim, Hae-Young; Lee, EunHeeThe present study examined the development of aspect marking in Korean with a focus on -ko iss- and –a iss- imperfective markers, compared with progressive and perfective markers. First, we examined the comprehension accuracy of 3-4-year-old Korean-learning children, while observing their online interpretation patterns via their eye-fixation. Second, 3-4-year-olds’ production of aspect markers was elicited, using pictures/videos that portrayed various aspects of events. Both groups of children comprehended progressive meanings better than the perfective/resultative meanings. Accuracy between the imperfective markers didn’t differ but 4-year-olds were more accurate than 3-year-olds. In production, 4-year-olds were more accurate in producing -ko iss- than -a iss-, while 3-year-olds were less accurate in using both markers. Eye-gaze patterns showed that children were faster in identifying the resultative -ko iss- than -a iss- event. Taken together, these results suggest that Korean children may begin extending the progressive -ko iss- form into the result state before they fully acquire a new resultative form, indicating polysemous extension of the existing form as the acquisition mechanism of aspect morphology.Item Open Access Development of Aspect Morphology in Korean(Journall of Language Science, 2016) Kim, H; Choi, YThe present study examined the development of aspect marking in Korean with a focus on -ko iss- and –a iss- imperfective markers, compared with progressive and perfective markers. First, we examined the comprehension accuracy of 3-4-year-old Korean-learning children, while observing their online interpretation patterns via their eye-fixation. Second, 3-4-year-olds’ production of aspect markers was elicited, using pictures/videos that portrayed various aspects of events. Both groups of children comprehended progressive meanings better than the perfective/resultative meanings. Accuracy between the imperfective markers didn’t differ but 4-year-olds were more accurate than 3-year-olds. In production, 4-year-olds were more accurate in producing -ko iss- than -a iss-, while 3-year-olds were less accurate in using both markers. Eye-gaze patterns showed that children were faster in identifying the resultative -ko iss- than -a iss- event. Taken together, these results suggest that Korean children may begin extending the progressive -ko iss- form into the result state before they fully acquire a new resultative form, indicating polysemous extension of the existing form as the acquisition mechanism of aspect morphology.Item Open Access "Dinner Party of Discourse Owners"(The Minnesota Review, 2012) Kang, LiuItem Open Access Displacement, War, and Exile in Simone Fattal’s Works and Days(Journal of Middle East Women's Studies, 2020-03-01) Cooke, MItem Open Access "Empire of the Machine": Oil in the Arabic Novel(BOUNDARY 2-AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF LITERATURE AND CULTURE, 2009) McLarney, E
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