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Korea : a history / Eugene Y. Park.

By: Publisher: Stanford, California : Stanford University Press, [2022]Copyright date: ©2022Description: xiv, 414 pages : illustrations, maps ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 1503629465
  • 1503629848
  • 9781503629462
  • 9781503629844
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Online version:: Korea.DDC classification:
  • 951.9 23/eng/20211013
LOC classification:
  • DS907.18 .P465 2022
Contents:
The classical period. The dawn of Korean civilization to 391 CE -- The three kingdoms, Puyŏ, and Kaya, 391-676 -- The northern and southern states, 676-918 -- The post-classical period. Early Koryŏ, 918-1146 -- Late Koryŏ, 1146-1392 -- The early modern era. Early Chosŏn, 1392-1567 -- The mid-Chosŏn crisis and recovery, 1567-1724 -- Late Chosŏn renovation and decline, 1724-1864 -- The late modern era. Reform, imperialism, and nationalism, 1864-1910 -- Japanese occupation, 1910-1945 -- Establishment of two Korean states, 1945-1960 -- Growth and divergence, 1960-1980 -- Toward détente, 1980-2000 -- Recent developments.
Summary: "The first English-language history of Korea that offers a balanced, comprehensive overview reflecting recent East Asian and Western scholarship. While popular trends, cuisine, and long-standing political tension have made Korea familiar in some ways to a vast English-speaking world, those who follow K-Pop or North Korea's nuclear weapons program have little familiarity with the region's recorded history of some two millennia. And for most, "East Asia" still means China and Japan, with South Korea lost somewhere in the middle. Korea: A History addresses general readers, providing an up-to-date, accessible overview of Korean history from antiquity to the present. Eugene Y. Park draws on original-language sources and the most up-to-date synthesis of recent East Asian and Western-language scholarship to provide a history unlike anything currently available. This book expands still-limited English-language discussions on premodern Korea, offering rigorous and compelling analyses of Korea's modernization while discussing LGBT, ethnic minority, and various historical groups not frequently included in Korean histories. Overall Park is able to break new ground on questions and debates that have been central to the field of Korean studies since its inception"-- Provided by publisher.
Holdings
Item type Current library Shelving location Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book Book NMC Library Stacks DS907.18 .P465 2022 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 33039001508968

Includes bibliographical references (pages 379-382) and index.

The classical period. The dawn of Korean civilization to 391 CE -- The three kingdoms, Puyŏ, and Kaya, 391-676 -- The northern and southern states, 676-918 -- The post-classical period. Early Koryŏ, 918-1146 -- Late Koryŏ, 1146-1392 -- The early modern era. Early Chosŏn, 1392-1567 -- The mid-Chosŏn crisis and recovery, 1567-1724 -- Late Chosŏn renovation and decline, 1724-1864 -- The late modern era. Reform, imperialism, and nationalism, 1864-1910 -- Japanese occupation, 1910-1945 -- Establishment of two Korean states, 1945-1960 -- Growth and divergence, 1960-1980 -- Toward détente, 1980-2000 -- Recent developments.

"The first English-language history of Korea that offers a balanced, comprehensive overview reflecting recent East Asian and Western scholarship. While popular trends, cuisine, and long-standing political tension have made Korea familiar in some ways to a vast English-speaking world, those who follow K-Pop or North Korea's nuclear weapons program have little familiarity with the region's recorded history of some two millennia. And for most, "East Asia" still means China and Japan, with South Korea lost somewhere in the middle. Korea: A History addresses general readers, providing an up-to-date, accessible overview of Korean history from antiquity to the present. Eugene Y. Park draws on original-language sources and the most up-to-date synthesis of recent East Asian and Western-language scholarship to provide a history unlike anything currently available. This book expands still-limited English-language discussions on premodern Korea, offering rigorous and compelling analyses of Korea's modernization while discussing LGBT, ethnic minority, and various historical groups not frequently included in Korean histories. Overall Park is able to break new ground on questions and debates that have been central to the field of Korean studies since its inception"-- Provided by publisher.

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