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Monday, February 7, 2011

Fw: H-ASIA: New online content at The Asia-Pacific Journal

----- Original Message -----
From: "Ryan Dunch" <ryan.dunch@UALBERTA.CA>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Monday, February 07, 2011 10:42 PM
Subject: H-ASIA: New online content at The Asia-Pacific Journal


> H-ASIA
> February 7, 2011
>
> New online content at The Asia-Pacific Journal (formerly Japan Focus)
> ************************************************************************
> From: "The Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus" <info@japanfocus.org>
>
> Newsletter No. 6. 2011, February 6, 2011
>
> New Articles Posted In This Issue
>
> Kim Man-bok,
> Let's Turn Korea's West Sea (the Sea of Dispute) into a Sea of Peace
> and Prosperity
>
> Mohammed A. Bamyeh,
> The Egyptian Revolution: First Impressions from the Field
>
> Greg Vanderbilt,
> "Your Own Sensitivity, At Least": Remembering the Postwar Poet
> Ibaragi Noriko, an Appreciation and Four Translations
>
> What's Hot?
> Japan's Neonationalists on China; New Stage in US Use of Financial
> Sanctions as Strategic Weapon? Levey Departs
>
> We present two featured articles this week. Kim Man-bok, director of
> South Korea's National Intelligence Service under Roh Moo-hyun calls
> for a return to the politics of peace and prosperity in North-South
> relations. Kim's deeply informed critique of ROK policies under Lee
> Myung-bak has led Seoul's prosecutors to charge him with revealing
> state secrets, in the process reopening fundamental questions about
> South Korean democracy. Our second feature likewise poses question
> about democracy and autocracy. Mohammed Bamyeh writes from inside the
> Egyptian revolution with a profound understanding of the
> extraordinary phenomenon underway in Cairo and across the Arab world.
> Greg Vanderbilt introduces the poetry of Ibaragi Noriko, a leading
> postwar poet who is little known in the Anglophone world.
>
> See http://japanfocus.org/
>
>
> *************************************************************************
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