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  1. Yoon Jeong Oh. Director of Graduate Studies, Assistant Professor. Yoon Jeong Oh received a Ph.D in Comparative Literature from Cornell University. As a comparatist scholar of modern Korean literature, she focuses on the interlingual, intertextual, and intercultural moments in Korea and beyond.

  2. Yoon Jeong Oh. This article explores conceptions of cinematic and postcolonial-Anthropocene space in South Korean film director Bong Joon Ho’s transnational films: Snowpiercer (2013), Okja (2017) and The Host (2006).

  3. Jaehyun is a member of the South Korean boy group NCT under SM Entertainment. Stage Name: Jaehyun (재현) Birth Name: Jeong Jae Hyun, but he legalized to Jeong Yoon Oh (정윤오) Birthday: February 14, 1997. Zodiac Sign: Aquarius. Chinese Zodiac Sign: Ox. Height: 180 cm (5’11″) Weight: 63 kg (138 lbs) Blood Type: A. Instagram: @_jeongjaehyun.

  4. By Yoon Jeong Oh. Book The Soft Power of the Korean Wave. Edition 1st Edition. First Published 2021. Imprint Routledge. Pages 12. eBook ISBN 9781003102489. ABSTRACT. This chapter focuses on the logic of capital that moves across cultures via analysis of the spatial structures employed in Bong Joon-Ho’s Parasite.

    • Yoon Jeong Oh
    • 2021
  5. Toy started as a duo of You Hee-yeol and Yoon Jeong-oh, and was named after their two initials 'Y', as in Two + Y = Toy. However, after releasing Toy's debut album, Yoon Jeong-oh left the band to study overseas and You Hee-yeol joined the navy for his mandatory military service.

  6. 5. Sept. 2021 · Focusing on the most recent phenomenon of Korean popular culture, this book considers the Korean Wave in the global digital age and addresses the social, cultural and political implications in their complexity within the contexts of global inequalities and uneven power structures. The collection brings together internationally renowned scholars ...

  7. 17. Feb. 2022 · Korean Studies Colloquium. Thursday, February 17, 2022 - 12:00pm. Yoon Jeong Oh. Assistant Professor, New York University. Williams Hall 623. The Korean native writing system han’gŭl was invented in the mid-fifteenth century but only became standardized in the early twentieth-century under Japanese colonial rule.