Compressed Modernity in Perspective: Constitutive Dimensions, Manifesting Units and Historical Conditions

Compressed Modernity in Perspective: Constitutive Dimensions, Manifesting Units and Historical Conditions


04 Wednesday
Wed, 04/10/2017
13h-15h

Location

Free



Laurence Roulleau-Berger, Co-director of the sino-french International associated laboratory "Post-Western Sociologies in France and in China" is proud to announce that Professor Chang Kyung Sup, Seoul National University, will give his first conference in France at the ENS de Lyon : "Compressed Modernity in Perspective: Constitutive Dimensions, Manifesting Units and Historical Conditions" –
Abstract
Compressed modernity is defined as a civilizational condition in which economic, political, social and/or cultural changes occur in an extremely condensed manner in respect to both time and space, and in which the dynamic coexistence of mutually disparate historical and social elements leads to the construction and reconstruction of a highly complex and fluid social system. In a series of work, I have tried to show that the thesis of compressed modernity can usefully explain the extreme changes, rigidities, complexities, intensities, and imbalances in South Korean society (and in other East Asian societies) and help analyze interrelationships among such traits and components. In this conference, I will (1) explain the specific constitutive dimensions and manifesting units of compressed modernity, (2) examine, within the context of postcolonial Korea, the concrete historical conditions for the generation and reformulations of compressed modernity, and (3) discuss the latest civilizational and developmental predicament of South Korea as its post-compressed modern condition.
Professor Chang Kyung Sup, a PhD from Brown University, has taught sociology at Seoul National University since 1991. His research has dealt with the particular workings of sociopolitical practices and institutions in Korean/Asian development and modernization, focusing on the interfaces between national and global dynamics of social change (“compressed modernity”), between economic development and social policy (“developmental liberalism” as a social policy regime of the developmental state), between socioeconomic reality and political modernity (“developmental citizenship” as the dominant but informal mode of governance), and between macro and micro institutions of social reproduction (state-family-individual relationships).
His related work has appeared in Economy and Society, British Journal of Sociology, World Development, Citizenship Studies, etc. His recent books include: South Korea under Compressed Modernity (2010, Routledge), Developmental Politics in Transition (coedited with Ben Fine and Linda Weiss, 2012, Palgrave Macmillan), Contested Citizenship in East Asia (coedited with Bryan S. Turner, 2012, Routledge), and The Wiley Blackwell Encyclopedia of Social Theory (5 volumes, coedited with Bryan S. Turner, et al., forthcoming in November 2017)
Subject(s)
Keywords