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Dear all,</div>
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On this sad occasion, I would like to share some of my memories of Professor Yong-ho Ch'oe and reminisce.</div>
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I first learned of him in the early 1990s when I entered graduate school and was reading his works in the context of the legendary 1980s debate on Joseon's social history. Such luminaries in the field as Han Yeongu, Yi Seongmu, Song Junho, my mentor Ed Wagner,
and, of course, Yong-ho Ch'oe, contributed to what was a spirited debate, with lots of goings back and forth on such topics as the status hierarchy, government service examination system, and social mobility. Finally, in 2002, I had the privilege of meeting
him in person at a conference. Subsequently, he was supportive of my career in many ways. He shared with me, among others, his unpublished manuscript originally intended as a chapter for the Joseon volume of the
<i>Cambridge History of Korea</i>, the project that had been sitting idle since the death of its editor, the late Jim Palais. The manuscript was a huge help for me in preparing a political history chapter for the project revived in the 2010s. </div>
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I am indebted to him for guiding me to where I am today as a scholar, and I would like to express my sincerest gratitude.</div>
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Yours,</div>
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Gene</div>
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<span style="font-size: 12pt;">Eugene Y. Park </span><span style="font-size: 11pt;">ÆÓÓ¢æ</span></div>
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Professor of History</div>
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University of Nevada, Reno</div>
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<div id="divRplyFwdMsg" dir="ltr"><font face="Calibri, sans-serif" style="font-size:11pt" color="#000000"><b>From:</b> Koreanstudies <koreanstudies-bounces@koreanstudies.com> on behalf of Cheehyung Harrison Kim <cheehyungkim@gmail.com><br>
<b>Sent:</b> Friday, May 17, 2024 3:11 PM<br>
<b>To:</b> Korean Studies Discussion List <koreanstudies@koreanstudies.com><br>
<b>Subject:</b> [KS] Yong-ho Ch'oe, Pioneering Scholar of Korean History, dies at 93</font>
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<p><strong><span style="background-color:#f1c40f">[EXTERNAL EMAIL]</span></strong></p>
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<div dir="ltr">Sharing the news of Yong-ho Ch'oe's passing with the Korean Studies community around the world. Obituary below and attached. Thanks.<br>
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<div>--Cheehyung Harrison Kim<br>
<div><font size="4" face="times new roman, serif"><b><br>
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<div><font size="4" face="times new roman, serif"><b>Remembering Yong-ho Ch¡¯oe, a Pioneering Historian of Korea and a Champion of Harmony between the East and the West</b></font>
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<div><img alt="image.png" width="146" height="146" style="margin-right:0px" data-outlook-trace="F:1|T:1" src="cid:ii_lwb7uppz0"><font size="4" face="times new roman, serif"><br>
Yong-ho Ch¡¯oe, Emeritus Professor in the Department of History at the University of Hawai¡®i at M¨¡noa, a pioneering scholar of Korean history, a devoted husband, and a loving father of two sons, died peacefully on Wednesday, May 15, 2024, in Honolulu. He was
93.</font></div>
<div><font size="4" face="times new roman, serif"> </font></div>
<div><font size="4" face="times new roman, serif">Born in 1931 in the city of Daegu in southeastern Korea during the tumultuous colonial period, Yong-ho Ch¡¯oe grew up in a family deeply involved in the Korean independence movement, an upbringing that brought
hardship but also equipped him with the capacity for hard work and a sense of duty for a greater cause. <br>
When the Korean War broke out in 1950, Yong-ho Ch¡¯oe enlisted in the South Korean army still as a teenager, eventually becoming an intelligence officer and serving until 1958. A part of his duty was to work with the United State military, a job that opened
an opportunity for him to go to college in the United States. In 1960, he enrolled at Rockford College in Illinois and later transferred to the University of Arizona, where he completed his undergraduate education. All of his graduate education was at the
University of Chicago, a place where he gained a broad perspective of humanity, having studied European history and American history, along with Asian history. He received his Ph.D. from Chicago in 1970 while he was a researcher at the Harvard East Asia Research
Center.</font></div>
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Yong-ho Ch¡¯oe joined the Department of History at the University of Hawai¡®i at M¨¡noa in 1971, where he gifted the world with his tireless energy, excellent scholarship, and beloved collegiality for thirty years. He was a trailblazing scholar of Korean history
and Korean American history, as well as an early advocate of Korean studies. With Yong-ho Ch¡¯oe and Hugh Kang (also Emeritus) on the History faculty, the University of Hawai'i M¨¡noa became the first university in the United States to grant a Ph.D. in Korean
history. Yong-ho Ch¡¯oe was also a founding member of the Center for Korean Studies at the university, the oldest and largest center devoted to Korean studies outside of Korea, established in 1972. His commitment to advancing Korean studies is further reflected
in his involvement in launching two seminal academic journals¡ªfirst Korean Studies based at the University of Hawai¡®i at M¨¡noa, in 1975, and then Acta Koreana based at Keimyung University in his hometown of Daegu, in 1998.</font></div>
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Yong-ho Ch¡¯oe¡¯s splendid research, represented by three books, traversed time periods and regions. His first book, published in 1987, was
<i>The Civil Examinations and the Social Structure in Early Yi Dynasty Korea, 1392-1600</i>, a groundbreaking book about the society of Korea¡¯s Joseon Kingdom. Another major contribution to the field of Korean history was the monumental series
<i>Sources of Korean Tradition, Volumes 1 and 2</i> (1993 and 1996) and <i>Sources of Korean Tradition, Volumes 1 and 2</i> (1997 and 2000), which he co-edited with Peter Lee and Theodore de Bary and all published by Columbia University Press. The
<i>Sources</i>, which compiles and explains key historical texts, is firmly placed among the Korean studies canon. Later in his career, he wrote passionately about the history of Koreans in Hawai'i, penning
<i>From the Land of Hibiscus: Koreans in Hawai'i, 1903-1950, </i>published by the University of Hawai'i Press in 2006. </font></div>
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In an interview with Acta Koreana in 2010, Yong-ho Ch¡¯oe said the following when asked about what the East and the West should to learn from each other: ¡°Too often in the encounters between the East and the West, the latter has exhibited its ugly inclinations,
such as misconceived racism and a predatory appetite toward the former, taking advantage of its military and industrial power. But, fortunately, such a conception has fast dissipated in the last several decades. Globalization is inevitable and is here now,
and regardless of one¡¯s origin or belief, all must live together in peace and harmony with mutual respect for each other.¡± He was a true champion of global cooperation.</font></div>
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As a teacher, Yong-ho Ch¡¯oe was warm and cultivating. Many of his students went on to become respected scholars in Korean history, including Yeon-ung Kwon at Kyungpook National University, Seong-nae Pak and Byeong-yul Ban at Hanguk University of Foreign Studies,
Jay Lewis at the University of Oxford, Kenneth Robinson at the International Christian University in Japan, Michael Seth at James Madison University, Brandon Palmer at Coastal Carolina University, John Duncan at UCLA, and Chizuko Allen at the University of
Hawai¡®i at M¨¡noa.</font></div>
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Even after retirement, in 2001, Yong-ho Ch¡¯oe was active and engaging, regularly organizing a community forum at his apartment in Kaka¡®ako, where people from different backgrounds gathered to learn and discuss the pressing issues of the day. For his scholarship
and dedication, Yong-ho Ch¡¯oe received, in 2020, the Light of the Orient Award given by the Korean American Foundation of Hawai'i. In 2021, the South Korean government awarded him the Order of Civil Merit Dongbaek Medal, the third highest order of merit given
by the government. </font></div>
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<div><img alt="1973 Dept Soccer.jpg" width="518" height="389" style="margin-right:0px" data-outlook-trace="F:1|T:1" src="cid:ii_lwb7vvks1"><br>
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<div><font size="4" face="times new roman, serif">Yong-ho Ch¡¯oe at the History Department soccer match in 1973<br>
<br>
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<div><font size="4" face="times new roman, serif">When asked, in 2022, to write a commemorative essay for the fiftieth anniversary of the Center for Korean Studies, Yong-ho Ch¡¯oe did not write about the many accolades he received during his long career. No,
he wrote about the time in September 1978 when he formed the Committee for Korean Rights and protested against the local media¡¯s use of the term ¡°Korean bars¡± to refer to all hostess bars in Honolulu. He and the Committee demanded the media stop using the
term because it was derogatory and because the hardworking people at these drinking taverns deserved dignity and respect. In late September, a local newspaper released a statement of apology and the term was never used again in the media in Hawai¡®i. For a
person who overcame many barriers and achieved considerable success, he certainly felt that fighting for the rights and respect of the tavern workers was one of his proudest moments. </font></div>
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Yong-ho Ch¡¯oe will be remembered as a person filled with kindness, generosity, humor, and courage. He was a brilliant historian, a wonderful colleague, and a champion of underrepresented peoples of Hawai'i. He is survived by his spouse, Minja Kim Ch¡¯oe (a renowned
population studies scholar), and two sons, Dan and Yun.<br>
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</font></div>
<div><font size="4" face="times new roman, serif"><i>Cheehyung Harrison Kim, the current Korea historian at the University of Hawai¡®i at M¨¡noa, contributed to this obituary.</i></font><br>
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