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Nancy Abelmann: Anthropologist, Citizen, and Thinker in/on the Global University

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 October 2018

Jiyeon Kang*
Affiliation:
Jiyeon Kang ([email protected]) is Associate Professor in the Department of Communication Studies and in the International Programs at the University of Iowa.
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Abstract

This article discusses Nancy Abelmann's scholarship on the university and includes a new study of the South Korean media discourse on Chinese international students—a work she planned but could not undertake. Abelmann studied the university, viewing it as a window to society's particular desires and anxieties regarding the future. Her research on South Korean university students reveals their personal fervor and struggle to stay afloat amidst the country's rapid modernization and globalization. Her later work on the American university considers the struggles of Asian American and Asian international students, illuminating the new realities of a global educational market and exploring new ethics of sharing the same university. The study in the second part of this article demonstrates how South Korean universities and public discourse have attempted to “optimize” the increasing numbers of Chinese international students as financial and symbolic capital. The shift between 2001 and 2016 from maximizing to distancing shows that Korean universities were straddling a line between the desire to become global institutions and the realization that they are a second-choice destination in the global higher-education market.

Type
Breaking Down Boundaries, Forging New Paths: The Living Memory of Nancy Abelmann
Copyright
Copyright © The Association for Asian Studies, Inc. 2018 

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References

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2 Nancy Abelmann and Jiyeon Kang, New Global Civilities: The Mobile Undergraduate in the U.S., China, and South Korea (unpublished manuscript), last modified September 23, 2015.

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6 Ibid., 6.

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28 Lee, “Chibangdae Mŏkyŏsallinŭn,” op. cit. note 26.

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