[KS] can Asian Americans have a voice in Asian Studies?

Nicholas Carter and Felice Luftschein felice at casco.net
Tue Sep 30 13:57:34 EDT 2003


Mr. Hubinette has written extensively on Korean adoption, from a perspective
that essentially equates international transracial adoption with slavery:
http://www.transracialabductees.org/politics/samdolcritique.html

felice at casco.net is Felice Luftschein and Nicholas Carter. See our web pages
http://www.cartertools.com/nfhome.html

> Message: 3
> Date: Tue, 30 Sep 2003 00:05:58 -0700 (PDT)
> From: Steven Capener <sotaebu at yahoo.com>
> Subject: Re: [KS] can Asian Americans have a voice in Asian Studies?
> To: Korean Studies Discussion List <Koreanstudies at koreaweb.ws>
> Message-ID: <20030930070558.93155.qmail at web21102.mail.yahoo.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
>
> Greetings all,
(snip)
> This is not a well-informed opinion and the tone of this post is puzzling,
especially the comment about white professors being married to Korean women
or having adopted children(I am curious as to how an adopted Korean child
could secure any kind of access to Korean culture or language). I wonder at
the intent of such a comment.
>
> Best,
>
> Steven D. Capener
> Seoul
>
>
>
> Tobias H?inette <tobias at orient.su.se> wrote:
> Korean studies is still a white reservation





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