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X-WR-CALNAME;VALUE=TEXT:Yuk Joowon | Between Pig Heads and Racist Banners: The Politics of Mosque Construction in South Korea
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SUMMARY:Yuk Joowon | Between Pig Heads and Racist Banners: The Politics of Mosque Construction in South Korea
DESCRIPTION:<p><em>Harvard-Yenching Institute Visiting Scholar Talks</em><br><em>Co-sponsored by the Harvard Korea Institute</em></p><drupal-media data-entity-type="media" data-entity-uuid="1a3a2191-cb0b-4b9e-b219-4d843099405a" data-view-mode="hwp_medium">&nbsp;</drupal-media><p><strong>Yuk Joowon</strong><br><span>Professor, Kyungpook National University; HYI Visiting Scholar, 2025-26</span></p><p>Chair/Discussant: <strong>Sun Joo Kim,&nbsp;</strong><span>Harvard-Yenching Professor of Korean History, Harvard University</span></p><p><strong>Abstract:</strong><br><span>Although Muslims constitute only a small fraction of South Korea’s population, Islamophobia has intensified markedly over the past decade. This rise parallels a shift in public discourse from a migration–development nexus toward increasingly exclusionary, “(Korean) nationals first” narratives that conflate migration with national security threats. South Korea’s belated and precarious multicultural discourse—premised on a hierarchical migration regime—has proved strikingly short-lived.</span></p><p><span>This talk examines the highly contested construction of the Daruleeman Mosque in Daegu, a case that drew international media and policy attention for the grotesque display of pigs’ body parts at the construction site. Drawing on four years of ethnographic action research (2021–present), I trace multi-scalar bordering practices enacted by anti-mosque resident protesters, local authorities, and far-right Protestant networks. Through this analysis, I illuminate the dynamics of social conflict surrounding migrant communities and the racial, cultural, and religious fault lines of South Korean society.</span></p><p><span>By situating the Daruleeman controversy within the global circulation of Islamophobic discourses, the active mobilization of far-right Protestant groups, and growing anti-immigrant nationalism, this talk contributes to broadening the study of Islamophobia and racism beyond Western contexts and highlights how these transnational ideologies are locally rearticulated in South Korea.</span></p><p><span>**</span><br><span>For more information, please visit </span><a href="https://www.harvard-yenching.org/events/between-pig-heads-and-racist-banners-the-politics-of-mosque-construction-in-south-korea/"><span>here</span></a><span>.</span></p>
LOCATION:(In-Person) Common Room (#136), 2 Divinity Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02138
STATUS:CONFIRMED
DTSTART:20251021T153000Z
DTEND:20251021T170000Z
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