Academic literature on the topic 'World Cup (Soccer) (2002 : Korea and Japan)'

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Journal articles on the topic "World Cup (Soccer) (2002 : Korea and Japan)"

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McLaughlin, Alastair. "Korea/Japan or Japan/Korea? The Saga of Co‐hosting the 2002 Soccer World Cup." Journal of Historical Sociology 14, no. 4 (December 2001): 481–507. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1467-6443.00157.

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LI, Jin-myon, and Translation:Kiyoshi FUJIKAWA. "Economic Effects of Korea-Japan Joint Hosting of 2002 World Cup Soccer Tournament." Input-Output Analysis 9, no. 1 (1999): 41–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.11107/papaios.9.41.

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Castellano, Julen, David Casamichana, and Carlos Lago. "The Use of Match Statistics that Discriminate Between Successful and Unsuccessful Soccer Teams." Journal of Human Kinetics 31, no. 1 (March 1, 2012): 137–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/v10078-012-0015-7.

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The Use of Match Statistics that Discriminate Between Successful and Unsuccessful Soccer TeamsThree soccer World Cups were analysed with the aim of identifying the match statistics which best discriminated between winning, drawing and losing teams. The analysis was based on 177 matches played during the three most recent World Cup tournaments: Korea/Japan 2002 (59), Germany 2006 (59) and South Africa 2010 (59). Two categories of variables were studied: 1) those related to attacking play: goals scored, total shots, shots on target, shots off target, ball possession, number of off-sides committed, fouls received and corners; and 2) those related to defence: total shots received, shots on target received, shots off target received, off-sides received, fouls committed, corners against, yellow cards and red cards. Discriminant analysis of these matches revealed the following: (a) the variables related to attacking play that best differentiated between winning, drawing and losing teams were total shots, shots on target and ball possession; and (b) the most discriminating variables related to defence were total shots received and shots on target received. These results suggest that winning, drawing and losing national teams may be discriminated from one another on the basis of variables such as ball possession and the effectiveness of their attacking play. This information may be of benefit to both coaches and players, adding to their knowledge about soccer performance indicators and helping to guide the training process.
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Tanaka (Translated by Hiroki Ogasaw, Toko. "The positioning and practices of the ‘feminized fan’ in Japanese soccer culture through the experience of the FIFA World Cup Korea/Japan 2002." Inter-Asia Cultural Studies 5, no. 1 (April 2004): 52–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1464937042000196815.

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Mori, Barbara Lynne Rowland. "Japan, Korea and the 2002 World Cup (review)." Korean Studies 31, no. 1 (2008): 116–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/ks.2008.0010.

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Kang, Hyunmee. "Same World Cup, Different News Frames." Athens Journal of Sports 9, no. 4 (November 9, 2022): 195–214. http://dx.doi.org/10.30958/ajspo.9-4-1.

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This study examined differences in slant, deviance, and prominence in news coverage of the 1998 France and 2002 S. Korea/Japan World Cup and host countries, considering countries’ political, economic, and cultural ties as external determinants of the newsworthiness of foreign news. The main findings were that hosting the World Cup did not influence the positive image of a host country or the degree of deviance and prominence of news; U.S. journalists’ preferences for topics covered in foreign news was found in World Cup-related host country news as well as general news of host countries; political, economic, and cultural ties between host countries and the United States were reflected in the general news of host countries; and news coverage of non-Western countries was significantly different in general news. Keywords: news frames of international sporting events, deviance, 1998 and 2002 FIFA World Cup news, national images of South Korea, Japan, and France
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이현정 and 조영한. "Performing Nation-ness in South Korea during the 2002 Korea-Japan World Cup." Korea Journal 49, no. 3 (October 2009): 93–120. http://dx.doi.org/10.25024/kj.2009.49.3.93.

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Park, Sam-hun. "The Conflictual Legacy of the Korea-Japan Joint World Cup." Border Crossings: The Journal of Japanese-Language Literature Studies 14, no. 1 (June 28, 2022): 4–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.22628/bcjjl.2022.14.1.4.

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There has been a confrontational structure to the relationship between Korea and Japan for several years, as the South Korean government reneged on the Japanese military “comfort women” agreement, and the Supreme Court’s ruling on compensation for forced laborers led to Japanese restrictions on Korean exports. In tandem with these developments, anti-Japanese sentiment in Korean society has been growing stronger, as have anti-Korean attitudes in Japanese society. This article suggests that the experience of the 2002 Korea-Japan joint World Cup was not conducive to better relations, but was rather the starting point of the current xenophobia within each country in relation to the other.
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TAKAHASHI, Hiroshi, Koki KAKU, Takeshi TANAKA, Tamano MATSUI, Ken OSAKA, Takaaki OHYAMA, and Nobuhiko OKABE. "An Estimation of Imported Infections Concerning 2002 FIFA World Cup Korea/Japan." Journal of the Japanese Association for Infectious Diseases 76, no. 2 (2002): 102–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.11150/kansenshogakuzasshi1970.76.102.

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Hahm, Jeongbeom, Tae-Ahn Kang, and Hirotaka Matsuoka. "Understanding the Relationship between Past Experience of a Sports Mega-Event and Current Spectatorship: The Mediating Role of Nostalgia." Sustainability 13, no. 6 (March 22, 2021): 3504. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su13063504.

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Mass sport participation has received considerable attention in the recent sport management literature. However, little is known about sport spectatorship as an outcome of sports mega-events (SMEs). This is the first study to use cross-cultural analysis to examine the relationship between the 2002 Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA) World Cup Korea/Japan and current football spectatorship in the host countries. In the context of SMEs, this study uses the psychological construct of nostalgia as a mediator to identify the relationship with spectatorship. Data from 416 and 408 respondents from South Korea and Japan, respectively, were collected through online surveys and analysed cross-culturally using Hayes’ PROCESS macro model 4. We find that the nostalgia evoked by the 2002 World Cup has positively influenced the host nations’ current football spectatorship. While this SME has a strong impact on evoking nostalgia, the effect of nostalgia on spectator behaviour is significant, yet comparatively weak.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "World Cup (Soccer) (2002 : Korea and Japan)"

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Lee, Hyunjung 1977. "Global fetishism : dynamics of transnational performances in contemporary South Korea." Thesis, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/2152/3877.

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Using South Korea's transnational performances as a case-study, this dissertation examines the cultural implications of the much-celebrated Korean model of national development. Starting with two contemporary South Korean performances--The Last Empress, the Musical (1995), and Nanta [Cookin'] (1997), a nonverbal performance--I explore how the producers' commitments to South Korea's cultural development are manifested in these productions. Situating these performances within the South Korean social context of the mid-1990s, I explore how the reinvention of Korean traditional cultures represents both national capacity and responds to calls for globalism without losing Korean identity. In the first chapter, my analysis of The Last Empress illustrates how local desire for global success resulted in a perpetuation of a Broadway-style musical in a Korean mode. I argue that, while the play utilizes its female character's pioneering image to claim a place for the musical in the global era, it simultaneously pulls her back into the traditional domain. With Nanta [Cookin'] in the following chapter, I argue that the production's commercial accomplishment lies in its strategic blending of pan-Asian cultural elements and the use of food without language which well co-operated with the burgeoning cultural tourism industry in South Korea. Extending my argument further, I conclude with an analysis of global-national interplay as they were played out at the 2002 Korea-Japan World Cup. As a way of understanding the nationalistic fervor during the event, I suggest that the mass festive rally functions as a "social performance." In these performances, Korean nationalism, conjoined with global desire, was reconfigured through spontaneous gatherings, styles, fashions, expressions, and gestures. Like its theatrical counterparts, the World Cup rally insists on Korean-ness as what qualifies South Korea to be a global player. I conclude by offering the concept, "global fetishism," to explicate the complex and even contradictory assimilation of the national into the global in these performances. They are showcases for how globalization taps into the local rhetoric of development, charged by South Korea's inherent nationalism. If for South Korea "global" is synonymous with glamorous cultural success, in each context it is precisely the return to the local which permits global fetishism.
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Books on the topic "World Cup (Soccer) (2002 : Korea and Japan)"

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Michael, Lewis, and Lewis Michael. World Cup soccer: Korea/Japan, 2002. Wickford, R.I: Moyer Bell, 2002.

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1955-, Horne John, and Manzenreiter Wolfram, eds. Japan, Korea, and the 2002 World Cup. New York: Routledge, 2002.

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Zúñiga, Fausto Zambrano. Sueño cumplido: Ecuador mundialista! 2nd ed. Quito: F. Zambrano, 2004.

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Young, Jeong Kawng, and Suh Kyong Won, eds. 2002 FIFA World Cup Stadium 10 Korea. Seoul: Archiworld Co. Ltd., 2002.

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Radnedge, Keir. Japan & South Korea: World Cup 2002 fact file. London: Carlton Books, 2002.

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Ilbosa, Chosŏn, ed. Kkum ŭn iruŏ chinda: Hidingkʻŭ wa Tʻaegŭk chʻŏnsadŭl ŭi sinhwa chʻangjo 500-il ripʻotʻŭ. 8th ed. Sŏul Tʻŭkpyŏlsi: Chosŏn Ilbosa, 2002.

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Chŏng, Tʻaek-hŭi. Wŏldŭkʻŏp esŏ natʻanan kungminjŏk yŏktongsŏng ŭi silsang kwa kukka imiji punsŏk =: A study on Korean dynamics in World Cup 2002 and the national image of Korea. Sŏul-si: Hanʼguk Kyoyuk Kaebarwŏn, 2003.

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Chŏng, Tʻaek-hŭi. Wŏltŭkʻŏp esŏ natʻanan kungminjŏk yŏktongsŏng ŭi silsang kwa kukka imiji punsŏk =: A study on Korean dynamics in World Cup 2002 and the national image of Korea. Sŏul-si: Hanʼguk Kyoyuk Kaebarwŏn, 2003.

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Chŏng, Tʻaek-hŭi. 2002 wŏltŭkʻŏp ihu yŏktongjŏgin kukka kyŏngyŏng kwa kukka imiji chego rŭl wihan chŏngchʻaek kwaje kaebal yŏnʼgu =: A study on developing policies for managing of Korean dynamics and enhancing the national image of Korea after 2002 FIFA World Cup. Sŏul-si: Hanʼguk Kyoyuk Kaebarwŏn, 2003.

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Chŏng, Tʻaek-hŭi. 2002 Wŏldŭkʻŏp ihu yŏktongjŏk in kukka kyŏngyŏng kwa kukka imiji chego rŭl wihan chŏngchʻaek kwaje kaebal yŏnʼgu =: A study on developing policies for managing of Korean dynamics and enhancing the national image of Korea after 2002 FIFA World Cup. Sŏul-si: Hanʼguk Kyoyuk Kaebarwŏn, 2003.

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Book chapters on the topic "World Cup (Soccer) (2002 : Korea and Japan)"

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Tagsold, Christian. "Remember – Forget. The 2002 FIFA World Cup Korea / Japan as Reconciliation of a Dark Past?" In The FIFA World Cup 1930 – 2010, 337–52. Wallstein Verlag, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.5771/9783835326064-337.

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Pacheco Pardo, Ramon. "The Liberal Decade 1998–2007." In Shrimp to Whale, 141–72. Oxford University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197659656.003.0006.

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Abstract Kim Dae-jung became the first liberal South Korean president since the 1960s when he took office in 1998. His victory was considered the moment when the 386 Generation that pushed for democracy in the 1980s really took power. The peaceful transition of power between conservatives and liberals showed the maturity of the South Korean democracy. Coming in the throes of the Asian Financial Crisis, Kim's presidency was marked by a focus on economic recovery and finding new growth engines. In this context, the South Korean government emphasized innovation as the future of the country's economy. Meanwhile, the Korean Wave was starting to take hold in Asia and beyond, and the South Korean government supported the internationalization of the country's artists. With South Korea recovering from the Asian Financial Crisis relatively quickly and having become a developed country, civic nationalism as opposed to minjok became the way in which most Koreans saw themselves. The successful hosting of the 2002 FIFA World Cup together with Japan reinforced this. With regards to North Korea, the Kim government pursed a Sunshine Policy to provide support to the impoverished country, resulting in the first-ever inter-Korean summit in 2000.
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