WHA Annual Meeting: Korea 2026

Jieon Yoo

Jieon Yoo is currently a graduate student of Cold War and Decolonization, completing her Ph.D. in History at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Building on her M.A. thesis, "Shadow Networks: Smuggling and the Making of Modern Korea," her research seeks to write a history from below, centering the lived experiences of ordinary people caught between the forces of decolonization and the global Cold War. She is particularly interested in how informal economies, material culture, and the senses served as crucial sites for navigating and negotiating imperial power in everyday life.

Institutional Affiliation:

University of Wisconsin-Madison


Session

06-27
08:30
90min
Vernacular Culture, Connectivity and Sovereignty
Alina Hassan, Dain Lee, Jiyoon Auo, Jieon Yoo

According to Laura Doyle (2020), “inter-imperiality” is a condition in which empires continually shape one another through overlapping infrastructures, labor regimes, and affective economies. From Japanese coloniztion to U.S. military occupation, Cold War division, and ongoing geopolitical pressures, Korean history reveals how inter-imperial forces reformed and reoccupied colonial infrastructures within shifting regional and global orders. This panel explores how dynamics in modern Korea formed different sites of culture, mobility, and everyday practice.
To pursue this approach, this panel addresses vernacular forms of connectivity and sovereignty within the inter-imperial field of Cold War Korea. Following Anna Tsing’s (2004) observation that global connections arise in local frictions, we use “vernacular” to highlight the situated, improvised, and relational practices through which ordinary actors rework imperial forces in everyday life. Breaking away from state-centric narrative, we examine how ordinary or marginalized groups forged transnational connections and enacted alternative forms of sovereignty through everyday cultural practices.
To elaborate, Lee examines transnational parallels of Korean women artists and those from Eastern Europe and Latin America in performing arts; Auo analyzes cross-border affective histories embedded in Korean and Japanese popular music; Yoo investigates sensory and material networks of smuggling that structured everyday economic life; and Hassan delves into print media revealing Koreans’ understanding of contemporary political circumstances. Collectively, our papers demonstrate that these cultural approaches were not peripheral to the making of the modern Korean state; rather, they constituted crucial sites in which imperial legacies were reworked, Cold War structures negotiated, and new forms of agency emerged.

Room 403 PC Desk (Seats 30)