Landlords, peasants, and intellectuals in modern Korea /
This volume introduces, for the first time in English, the work of one of the major schools of historiography in South Korea. Centered at Yonsei University, the school focuses on intellectual and socioeconomic history. A selection of studies illuminates the internal dynamics and historical roots of...
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| Other Authors: | , , |
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| Format: | Book |
| Language: | English |
| Published: |
Ithaca, NY :
East Asia Program, Cornell University,
2005.
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| Series: | Cornell East Asia series ;
no. 128. |
| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: |
Online Access |
| Summary: | This volume introduces, for the first time in English, the work of one of the major schools of historiography in South Korea. Centered at Yonsei University, the school focuses on intellectual and socioeconomic history. A selection of studies illuminates the internal dynamics and historical roots of Korea's transition to modernity and the division of the country and is a powerful refutation of the so-called "stagnation theory." The volume is in three parts: the first covers the period before the Japanese occupation; the second focuses on the socioeconomic history during the occupation; and the last examines the work of three major intellectuals of the occupation period: Paek Namʻun, An Chaehong, and Yi Suntʻak. |
Internet
Online AccessHesburgh Library General Collection
| Call Number: |
HD 2095.5 .L36 2005
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| Available Request Request a scan of an article or book chapter |