• 제목/요약/키워드: southeast asia

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Agronomic features and yield components of sago palms grown in the islands in Southeast Asia and Melanesia

  • Ehara, Hiroshi;Naito, Hitoshi;Mishima, Takashi;Toyoda, Yukio;Mizota, Chitoshi;Susanto, Slamet;Bintoro, M.H.;Pasolon, Yulius B.;Abbas, Barahima;Suwignyo, Rujito A.;Munandar, Munandar
    • 한국작물학회:학술대회논문집
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    • 한국작물학회 2017년도 9th Asian Crop Science Association conference
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    • pp.360-360
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    • 2017
  • Morphological characteristics indicating agronomic features and yield components (trunk length, trunk diameter, thickness of bark, pith density, dry-matter percentage of pith and starch concentration in pith) of sago palms (Metroxylon sagu Rottbøll) were compared between the 27 populations grown in the islands in Southeast Asia (West Sumatra, South Sumatra, West Java, Southeast Sulawesi, Ternate, Halmahera and Seram in Indonesia) and the 20 populations grown in Melanesia (West Papua in Indonesia, East Sepik and New Ireland island in Papua New Guinea). The average starch yield calculated based on the yield components was $310kg\;plant^{-1}$ and $244kg\;plant^{-1}$ in the islands in Southeast and Melanesia, respectively. The variation of starch yield in Melanesia (CV: about 80%) was larger than that in the islands in Southeast Asia (CV: about 60%). The difference in starch yield in the islands in Southeast Asia was mainly attributed to the trunk diameter breast height and the dry-matter percentage of pith. In contrast, the differences in trunk length and dry-matter percentage of pith mainly accounted for the difference in starch yield in Melanesia. The sago palms in the islands in Southeast Asia had a comparatively thick and short trunk and those in Melanesia had a comparatively thinner and longer trunk. However, the average pith dry-matter yield was almost same level as $400kg\;plant^{-1}$ in both the islands in Southeast Asia and Melanesia. The difference in starch yield between the two areas was attributed to the difference in starch concentration in pith, 77% and 58% in the islands in Southeast Asia and Melanesia, respectively.

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Mapping Philippine Studies in North East Asia: A SWOT Analysis of Southeast Asian Studies Programs from China, Japan, and Korea

  • Laranjo, Ronel O.
    • 수완나부미
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    • 제12권1호
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    • pp.111-130
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    • 2020
  • This paper introduces the different Southeast Asian Studies academic programs of three universities in northeast Asia namely: Peking University (China); Tokyo University of Foreign Studies (Japan); and Busan University of Foreign Studies (Korea). This study mainly focuses on the Philippines as part of Southeast Asian studies program in the said universities. The researcher utilized archival work related to the Southeast Asian studies programs of each university. The study also examined the curriculum of the program, background of faculty, and motivations of students in studying Southeast Asian studies by conducting interviews and surveys. Strength, Weakness, Opportunities, Threats (SWOT) Analysis was employed by the researcher in analyzing the data from the different universities. Finally, in mapping out the teaching of Filipino language and Philippine-related subjects, this paper argued that Northeast Asian universities established a Southeast Asian Studies focused on Philippines because of various socio-economic-political factors, and not only because of the Filipino diaspora in the region.

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외연의 확대, 지평의 확산 : 동남아 미술 연구 10년 (Expansion of the Field: 10 Years of Research in Southeast Asian Arts)

  • 강희정
    • 동남아시아연구
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    • 제28권3호
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    • pp.43-74
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    • 2018
  • 이 글은 동남아시아 미술에 관한 연구가 2008년 이래 비약적으로 증가한 것으로 판단하고, 현재까지 약 10년간 동남아시아 지역학 분야에서의 동남아 미술 연구를 검토했다. 이 연구들은 동남아의 미술을 어떻게 다뤘는지 살펴보고, 향후 관련 연구의 방향을 검토했다. 이 기간에 발표된 동남아시아 미술 연구 논문은 50편이며, 베트남 미술과 인도네시아 미술에 관한 논문이 다수를 점한다. 11개국에 이르는 동남아시아 미술에 관한 연구가 단기간에 눈에 띄는 성과를 내기 어려운 전문적인 분야라는 점에서 연구의 성장에는 한계가 있을 수밖에 없으나 짧은 기간에 다양한 연구가 이뤄졌음은 주목할 만하다. 특히 도자기와 조각에 집중된 제한적인 연구라는 점에서 이 기간의 연구는 불균형한 발전을 이뤘다고 평가할 수 있다. 현재까지의 연구 성과와 동남아 지역 연구 환경을 살펴보면 지역별, 분야별 전문가가 필요하다는 결론이 나온다. 지난 10년간 동남아 미술 관련 연구가 발전을 거듭했지만 연구 분야와 대상이 편중되어 있다는 점에서 지역학의 한 분야로서 동남아 미술 연구의 균형 있는 발전을 위해서는 각 지역에 특화된 전문인력 양성이 시급하다.

Issues of Literature, Language, and Identity in Southeast Asia: Poetry by Marjorie Evasco and Dư Thị Hoàn from a Feminist Perspective

  • Nguyen Thi Thuy Hanh
    • 수완나부미
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    • 제16권2호
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    • pp.147-184
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    • 2024
  • At the dawn of the 20th century, Southeast Asian female poets increasingly delved into introspective reflections on gender, giving rise to a heightened self-awareness in their artistic contemplations. This shift in perspective brought forth numerous crucial topics for discussion, such as the historical role of female poets, women's experiences, feminine language, female voices, and female identity. The exploration of language has empowered female poets to discover a "third space" that allows them to exist and eliminate the pervasive gaps of women in Southeast Asia, creating social changes, fostering concepts of feminine culture, and establishing progressive social institutions. Marjorie Evasco (1953-) and Dư Thị Hoàn (1947 - ) are exemplary representatives of contemporary Southeast Asian women's poetry due to their significant artistic contributions and pivotal roles in promoting feminist literature in their respective countries. This study compares their poetic works, focusing on three crucial aspects: self-awareness of femininity and feminism as an identity autonomy, writing between two languages to express their identities, and constructing the image of mother and motherhood from personal and historical perspectives. Hence, the article highlights that Southeast Asian female poets, throughout different historical contexts, persistently forge their identities and strive for equal footing with men in society. Also, their invaluable contributions have significantly enriched the feminist literary tradition in Asia.

홍수 재난 대비 건축물 보호 시스템 개발 방향 (Development Direction of Building Protecting System to prepare for Flood)

  • 정인수;오은호
    • 한국건축시공학회:학술대회논문집
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    • 한국건축시공학회 2018년도 춘계 학술논문 발표대회
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    • pp.316-317
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    • 2018
  • Thailand and other Southeast Asian countries are experiencing frequent floods due to heavy rainfall and are using the Flood Rapid Defense System(FRDS) for an emergency. However, they are expensive and has a wedge-shaped panel suitable for the dirt bank, making it unsuitable for applications in Southeast Asia, a relatively underdeveloped country. In this study, the direction of development of FRDS was derived through domestic and overseas case analysis. Future studies should be carried out to develop the actual FRDS according to the development directions presented here. These results will be effective in preventing flooding of buildings in Southeast Asia as well as in Korea.

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Regional Identity and Belonging: Timor-Leste and ASEAN

  • Hooi, Khoo Ying
    • 수완나부미
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    • 제12권2호
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    • pp.119-140
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    • 2020
  • Emerging from Portuguese colonialism and Indonesian occupation to become one of the newest states, Timor-Leste is an interesting example of modern nation-building. Geographically, Timor-Leste is located in the area covered by the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN). In such context, Timor-Leste has a strong claim to belonging to Southeast Asia. Timor-Leste nevertheless has not yet been admitted formally as a member despite its application for membership in March 2011. This paper locates Timor-Leste in a broader context of their construction of regional identity and as part of Southeast Asia. Drawing upon the constructivist approach, this paper suggests that the complexity of Timor-Leste's regional affiliation with ASEAN is made more challenging with its quest to assert itself as a nation-in-the-making.

Electoralism, Ritual Process, and Voter Rationalities in Southeast Asia

  • Aguilar, Filomeno V.Jr.
    • 수완나부미
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    • 제10권1호
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    • pp.149-174
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    • 2018
  • Southeast Asians participate in elections eagerly, a fact indexed by the high electoral participation rates across a range of political conditions in the region. What gives elections in Southeast Asia such high legitimacy? Using data from Indonesia and the Philippines, this article emphasizes the need to understand peoples' rationalities, which are informed by meanings generated by prevailing cultural practices. From this perspective, electoralism can be understood as a cultural phenomenon that conforms to the structure of a ritual. Despite the democratic deficit in many electoral exercises, elections share the attractiveness and fun of traditional community festivities. Voters participate in elections as a testament to membership in a community. Although they do not always transform the existing social arrangements, elections embed contradictory impulses in the same way that cockfights do. A procedure of formal democracy authored elsewhere, electoralism has been localized in Southeast Asia and invested with indigenous significance.

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Southeast Asia in Japan's Spiritual Market: The Sacralization of Exoticism

  • Gaitanidis, Ioannis
    • 수완나부미
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    • 제8권1호
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    • pp.95-119
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    • 2016
  • From the migrant care-workers arriving in Japan from the Philippines and Indonesia to support the depleted social support system for the large population of the elderly (Ogawa 2012) to the increasing number of retiring Japanese embarking on long-stay tourism in Malaysia (Ono 2015), the Japanese image of Southeast Asia as an exotic destination offering cheap labor in return for official development assistance seems to be fading away. Yet these changes are not necessarily reflected in the way contemporary Japanese, especially those who belong to the global, "spiritual-but not-religious" (Fuller 2001) population, think of and "consume" Southeast Asia in their daily lives. Using three case-studies, spiritual tours, Thai massage, and an NGO founded by a Japanese spiritual therapist, this paper argues that in Japan's large spiritual market, which targets people seeking alternative ways to express their religiosity, the old-fashioned colonial exoticism of Southeast Asian narratives were integrated in a totalizing discourse, in which Japan remains the exceptional outlier (Tanaka 1993), a country still claimed to be "advanced" both spiritually and economically.

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동남아시아 문화와 사회의 형성 (The Making of Southeast Asian Culture and Society)

  • 조흥국
    • 수완나부미
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    • 제1권1호
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    • pp.1-25
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    • 2009
  • The diversity of Southeast Asian culture and society has been made by two factors: geopolitical environment and colonialism. The geopolitical position of the region between China Seas and Indian Ocean has made it possible that diverse cultures from Northeast Asia especially China and India, Middle East and Europe have flowed into the region. The fact that Southeast Asia was colonized by various European nations has provided additional diversity. The diversity manifests itself most clearly in the culture of Southeast Asia which has various layers: On the bottom lay the indigenous one, and above it Chinese and Indian and Islamic cultures and finally European one.

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Educational Dialogues in Southeast Asian Children Literature: Reading the Vietnamese Novel Ticket to Childhood (Nguyễn Nhật Ánh, 2008) and the Indonesian Novel The Rainbow Troops: A Novel (Andrea Hirata, 2005) in Comparison

  • Trinh Dang Nguyen Huong;Chi P. Pham
    • 수완나부미
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    • 제16권2호
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    • pp.39-65
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    • 2024
  • Education is widely considered an essential tool for national development, particularly in Southeast Asia, in which advancing education ideally means advancing social cohesion, and security, and economic growth. This paper juxtaposes The Rainbow Troops: A Novel (2005, hereafter The Rainbow Troops) by Indonesian writer Andrea Hirata and Cho tôi xin một vé đi tuổi thơ (Ticket to Childhood, 2008) by Vietnamese writer Nguyễn Nhật Ánh, understanding their potentially generated dialogue about idealized education. Reading character constructions and narrative flows against educational policies and realities of Vietnam and Indonesia in particular and Southeast Asia at large reveals criticism about the true goals of education programs pertaining to children. Specifically, they provoke in readers questions about the role of education as a tool for national development appropriate to each political and economic context and the respect for the psychological, intellectual, and physical development of children.