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- Weeks of Welcome
- Open Skate12:00 pm
- Campfire and Hot Chocolate: Bertozzi Conservation Area4:30 pm
- ECE Seminar: Pierluigi Debernardi11:00 am
- Aphasia in Post-socialist Memoryscape: Russian Speech Communities at the Limit of Korea11:30 am
- Workshop - International Student Job Search11:30 am
- Urban Inequalities Workshop: Daniel T. O’Brien (Northeastern)12:00 pm
- Trade in the Trump Era 2.0 Conference12:30 pm
- Book Talk: Racial Capitalism and International Tax Law: The Story of Global Jim Crow12:45 pm
- The Rikers Island Trilogy with Dr. Jarrod Shanahan3:30 pm
- BU Hillel: Free Boston Celtics Game4:30 pm
- Kagawa Toyohiko’s War Responsibility Confession4:30 pm
Aphasia in Post-socialist Memoryscape: Russian Speech Communities at the Limit of Korea
This talk focuses on a young boy’s aphasic problem from a Russophone Korean family in South Korea. Drawing on my previous ethnographic research among Russophone Koreans (Koryo Saram) over the past two decades, I briefly present historical and cultural contexts regarding their linguistic and cultural transformations since the early 20th century. On one hand, there was a remarkable change for the Korean nation, fragmented across state borders, and the return of these overseas Koreans, especially Russophone Koreans, who witness and testify to these historical changes more acutely. However, globalization, which has proceeded towards the rigidification of the nation-state system, hardly allows space for historical narratives for Russophone Koreans. Tentatively, these are the historical and cultural gaps I refer to. On the other hand, Roman Jakobson suggested and believed in the universality of human language. His utopian vision of human languages, seemingly rooted in his experience of the Russian Revolution, turns to children’s language learning as a human universal. Notably, his work on aphasia was mainly carried out in exile in Sweden on his way to the United States. What, then, is the link between the historical context and his interest in children’s aphasia?
| When | 11:30 am - 1:00 pm on 3 November 2025 |
|---|---|
| Building | Common Room (#136), 2 Divinity Avenue, Cambridge, MA, |