My Account Log in

4 options

South Korean migrants in China : an ethnography of education, desire, and temporariness / / Xiao Ma.

DOAB Directory of Open Access Books Available online

View online

De Gruyter Amsterdam University Press Complete eBook-Package 2024 Available online

View online

Ebook Central University Press Available online

View online

Project MUSE Open Access Books Available online

View online
Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Ma, Xiao, author.
Series:
New mobilities in Asia.
New Mobilities in Asia Series
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Koreans--China.
Koreans.
China--Emigration and immigration.
China.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (190 pages) : digital, PDF file(s).
Edition:
First edition.
Place of Publication:
Amsterdam : Amsterdam University Press B.V., 2024.
Summary:
This book is an ethnographic account of education and migration from the perspective of three groups of South Koreans in contemporary China: migrant parents, children/students, and educational agents. The book reveals how these temporary migrants make choices, plan their trajectories and engage with the authorities, both in China and South Korea. Migrant subjectivities among these groups are driven by and respond to the education-migration regimes of both the sending and receiving countries. As 'people in between', they occupy flexible and multiple positionalities that are transnationally distributed. However, paradoxically, they experience a juxtaposition of privilege, integration and separation, which is indicative of the Chinese style of internationalisation. The book adds weight to the argument that China is a temporary destination for foreigners and not one for long-term settlement.
Contents:
Cover
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
1 Introduction
Education as a Lens: Korean Migrants In-between Two States
Educational Desire: Agency in Temporary Migration Regimes
'Foreigners', 'Immigrants' and Chinese Internationalisation
'Temporary Residents', 'Blood-kins' and Korean Globalisation
A Multi-Scalar Ethnography
2 Temporary Residents' Community in Beijing
Come and Leave: South Korean Migration to China From the 1990s Onwards
Emergence, Development and Dispersal: the 'Koreatown(s)' in Beijing
The Variation in Ethnic Incorporation
Ethnic network
Ethnic category
Ethnic association
Conclusion
Bibliography
3 The Internationalised Education of China and the Globalise
International Schools in China: Beijing as a Hub
Internationalised Chinese Schools: Integration and Separation
Internationalisation of Higher Education in China: Talent as a 'Profit'
Overseas Korean Schools in China: The Patriotic and the Pragmatic
The 'Education Exodus' of South Korea
4 Educational Desire in School Choice: Identities of Home, Destination and the World
'Language Obsession': a Sino-centric Cosmopolitanism?
International/Bilingual Education Fever: The Quest for Social Status
Concerns About Chinese Schools: Undesirable Integration
Anxiety About the Korean School: Home-oriented Cosmopolitanism
5 Desirable Homecoming: The Pursuit of Tertiary Education in the Context of Temporary Migration Regimes
Return Migration in the Asian Context
'Why not an American University?'
The Motivation to Return Produced by Temporary Migration Regimes
Prolonging Their Stay: Creating 'Eligible' Returnees from Overseas
Hakkyo and Hagwŏn: Indispensable Intermediaries in Homeward Journeys
Conclusion.
6 Internationalisation in Chinese Education: The Quest for Entry to a Top Chinese University
Choosing to Stay: From 'Chibang' to Centre
'Good' and 'Bad' Students: The Desire to Enter Tsinghua and Beida
'High' and "Low' Thresholds: Desirable Students and the Internationalisation of Chinese Education
Segregation and Integration: Korean Students at Chinese Schools
Compliant and Canny Agents: A Bridging Service for Clueless Students and Chinese Universities
Mr Kim and Changchun Guojibu
Mr Paek and Ch'ingan Ipshihagwŏn
'Illegal' Ipshihagwŏn and 'Exemplary' Guojibu?
7 Conclusion
The People In-Between
Temporary Migrants and Temporary Migration Regimes
Desire as a Socio-Political Force in Migration
Understanding Chinese Internationalisation
Afterthoughts
Index
List of Illustrations
Figure 1 Number of South Korean Nationals in China (2005-2021).
Figure 2 The 'Koreatown(s)' in Beijing.
Figure 3 Wangjing Xiyuan Siqu.
Figure 4 The Community Policing Studio in Wangjing Xiyuan Siqu.
Figure 5 Seoul Sweet City in Yanjiao, Hebei Province.
Figure 6 The 'Shrinking' Korean Businesses in Wangjing in 2019.
Figure 7 A Korean-Chinese-Run Real Estate Agency in Wangjing.
Figure 8 A Korean Business Cluster in a Residential Compound in Wangjing.
Figure 9 A Lunch Break at One Bridge Class at Wangjing Experimental School.
Figure 10 The Number of International Students in Chinese Higher Education Institutions (2003-2017).
Figure 11 Number of Korean Students Studying Abroad (2000-2014).
Figure 12 Attending a Parent-teacher Meeting at an International Bilingual School in Beijing.
Figure 13 'Let's go to the world!'.
Figure 14 Enrolled Student Number in KISB (Grade 1-12) in 2013 and 2014.
Figure 15 White Envelopes Filled With One-month Tutoring Fees.
Figure 16 Study Abroad Agencies (Yuhagwŏn) in Seoul.
Figure 17 The Student Dormitory on Shilla Campus in Suburban Beijing.
Notes:
Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 26 Mar 2024).
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:
1-003-70407-7
1-04-080106-4
90-485-5380-6
9781003704072
OCLC:
1543507997

The Penn Libraries is committed to describing library materials using current, accurate, and responsible language. If you discover outdated or inaccurate language, please fill out this feedback form to report it and suggest alternative language.

Find

Home Release notes

My Account

Shelf Request an item Bookmarks Fines and fees Settings

Guides

Using the Find catalog Using Articles+ Using your account