Korean studies
Korean studies is an academic discipline that focuses on the study of Korea, which includes the Republic of Korea, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, and diasporic Korean populations. Areas commonly included under this rubric include Korean history, Korean culture, Korean literature, Korean art, Korean music, Korean language and linguistics, Korean sociology and anthropology, Korean politics, Korean economics, Korean folklore, Korean ethnomusicology and increasingly study of Korean popular culture. It may be compared to other area studies disciplines, such as American studies and Chinese studies. Korean studies is sometimes included within a broader regional area of focus including "East Asian studies".
The term Korean studies first began to be used in the 1940s, but did not attain widespread currency until South Korea rose to economic prominence in the 1970s. In 1991, the South Korean government established the Korea Foundation to promote Korean studies around the world.
Korean studies was originally an area of study conceived of and defined by non-Koreans. Korean scholars of Korea tend to see themselves as linguists, sociologists, and historians, but not as "Koreanists" unless they have received at least some of their education outside Korea and are academically active in languages other than Korean, or work outside Korean academia. In the mid-2000s, Korean universities pushing for more classes taught in English began to hire foreign-trained Koreanists of Korean and non-Korean origin to teach classes. This was often geared towards foreigners in Korean graduate schools. There are now graduate school programs in Korean Studies in most of the major Korean universities. BA programs in Korean Studies have now been opened at two Korean universities. The BA programs are distinctive in that they have few foreign students.
- The Academy of Korean Studies est.1978
- The Korea Research Foundation est.1981
- The Korea Foundation est.1991.
- The Advanced Center for Korean Studies est.1995.
Debates in the Field
There has been a small series of works debating Korean Studies published in academic journals. A sort of historical overview by Charles Armstrong titled "Development and Directions of Korean Studies in the United States" comes strongly from Armstrong's perspective teaching history at Columbia University, as his work: "Focusing on the discipline of history,... traces the emergence of Korean Studies in the 1950s, the evolution of the field and the changing backgrounds of American scholars working on Korea in the 1960s to 1980s, and the rapid growth of Korean Studies since the early 1990s." Another historian, Andre Schmid published an early contribution to the debate in 2008, challenging the ways that English academia was pushing or shaping the directions of Korean Studies. Schmid explained, "In the unequal global cultural arena where English still dominates, the direction of Korean Studies in the United States disproportionately shapes international representations of Korean culture." University of Berkeley Sociologist John Lie contributed two pieces to the debate, the more recent of which challenged the Korean Studies, claiming "senior Koreanists seem rather content with their progress, telling their followers bizarre tales from the field and seeking to reproduce the archaic and mistaken Harvard East Asia paradigm." Lie discusses the weaknesses he sees in this paradigm for the remainder of the essay. In 2018 CedarBough T Saeji published an article in Acta Koreana bringing in the perspective of teaching Korean Studies in Korea, focusing on "1) the struggle to escape the nation-state boundaries implied in the habitual terminology, particularly when teaching in the ROK, where the country is unmarked, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea is marked the implications of the expansion of Korean Studies as a major within the ROK; 3) in-class navigations of Korean national pride, the trap of Korean uniqueness and orientalization and attitudes toward the West."
Notable centers of Korean studies outside Korea
A-Z order- Beijing Foreign Studies University — School of Asian and African Studies
- Freie Universität Berlin - Institute of Korean Studies
- George Washington University —
- Institute of Oriental Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences - Department of Korean and Mongolian Studies
- University of British Columbia -
- University of California, Berkeley —
- University of California, Los Angeles —
- University of Chicago —
- Columbia University —
- Harvard University —
- University of Hawaii —
- Indiana University -
- Indiana University Bloomington -
- University of Leeds - , Leeds
- Katholieke Universiteit Leuven -
- University of London School of Oriental and African Studies —
- Far Eastern Federal University —
- Novosibirsk State Technical University —
- Ohio State University
- University of Pennsylvania —
- University of Sheffield — School of East Asian Studies
- Tenri University — Department of Foreign Languages
- Tufts University, The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy —
- University of Tokyo —
- University of Toronto —
- Vietnam National University, Ho Chi Minh City —
- Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Institute for European Studies —
- University of Washington -
- Yale University —
Korean Studies Programs in Korea
- Academy of Korean Studies - this is only with no undergraduate program
- Dong-A University -
- Ewha Womans University - B.A. degree program and M.A. degree program
- Hankuk University of Foreign Studies — and Graduate program
- Hanyang University -
- Korea University -
- Pusan National University -
- Sangmyung University -
- Seoul National University -
- Sogang University - Undergraduate and Graduate program of the School of Integrated Knowledge and Graduate program
- Yonsei University -
Academic Journals
- The Journal of Korean Studies has just moved to George Washington University after stints at University of Washington and Columbia.
- Korean Studies University of Hawaii.
- Korea Journal Formerly published by the Korean National Commission for UNESCO, Seoul, South Korea, this journal is now published by the Academy of Korean Studies.
- Acta Koreana Keimyung University, Daegu.
- Chosen Gakuho: Journal of the Academic Association of Koreanology in Japan, Tenri University.
- Korean Culture and Society, Association for the Study of Korean Culture and Society.
Associations for Korean Studies overseas
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Koreanists
Notable Koreanists in different fields include:
- Early Koreanists: James Scarth Gale, William E. Skillend and Richard Rutt.
- Music, dance, and performance: Lee Hye-ku, Song Bangsong, Keith Howard, Hwang Byungki, Lee Duhyon, Lee Byongwon, and Roald Maliangkay.
- Folklore, anthropology, and sociology: Roger Janelli, Shin Gi-wook, Nancy Abelmann, Laurel Kendall, Mutsuhiko Shima, Choi Chungmoo, Pai Hyung-il, Joanna Elfving-Hwang, John Lie, Stephen Epstein, CedarBough T. Saeji, and Shimpei Cole Ota.
- Religion: Robert Buswell Jr., Michael Kalton, Donald Clark and Donald Baker and James Huntley Grayson
- History: Bruce Cumings, Martina Deuchler, James Palais, Carter Eckert, Roger Tennant, Lew Young Ick, John Duncan, Michael Robinson, JaHyun Kim Haboush, Charles K. Armstrong, Lee Kibaek, Edward W. Wagner, Sung-Yoon Lee, and Todd Henry.
- Archeology: Gina Barnes and Bae Kidong.
- Literature: David McCann, Peter H. Lee, Yang Hi Choe-Wall, Kyeong-Hee Choi, and Brother Anthony of Taize.
- DPRK : Andrei Lankov, Charles K. Armstrong
- International relations: Sung-Yoon Lee
Library guides