[KS] Publication Announcement: Acta Koreana, Vol. 19, No. 1

Michael Finch mcefinch at gmail.com
Thu Jun 16 07:40:09 EDT 2016


Dear KS List members,

Academia Koreana, the Korean studies research institute of Keimyung
University, is pleased to announce the publication of Ac*ta Koreana*, Vol.
19, No. 1, the complete table of contents of which may be found at the end
of this e-mail. All the articles in this issue and all previous issues of
the journal are freely accessible on EBSCOhost, eArticle.net, Google
Scholar and at the *Acta Koreana* homepage http://www.actakoreana.org.

*Acta Koreana* is an English language, refereed journal that
is published semi-annually on June 15 and December 15. It is indexed in
Thomson Reuters Arts and Humanities Citation Index (A&HCI), Elsevier's
SCOPUS, Bibliography of Asian Studies (BAS) of the Association for Asian
Studies, and the Korea Citation Index (KCI).

Submissions of academic papers in the field of Korean arts and humanities
and translations of Korean literature are accepted for peer review
throughout the year, but papers to be considered for the next issue, Vol.
19, No. 2, should be submitted no later than August 1, 2015.

Best wishes,

Michael Finch



*ACTA KOREANA, VOL. 19, NO. 1*

*THEME ISSUE ARTICLES*

*CHRISTIAN EXPERIENCES IN KOREA*

Christian Experiences in Korea: Guest Editor’s Introduction
By Franklin Rausch
                          1–7

The Catholic Experience of Chosŏn Envoys in Beijing:
A Contact Zone and the Circulation of Religious Knowledge
in the Eighteenth Century
By Pierre-Emmanuel Roux
                  9–44

The Impact of Christianity on Modern Korea: An Overview
By Donald L. Baker
                        45–67

Suffering History: Comparative Christian Theodicy in Korea
By Franklin Rausch
                        69–97

Protestantism, Education, and the Nation:
The Shifting Location of Protestant Schools in Modern Korea
By Kyuhoon Cho
                         99–131

*AN **CHUNGGŭN IN THE KOREAN AND REGIONAL HISTORICAL MEMORY *

An Chunggŭn in the Korean and Regional Historical Memory:
Guest Editor’s Introduction
By Vladimir Tikhonov
                     133–137

Multiple Understandings of An Chunggŭn’s “Individual Act of Violence”
in Korean Literary Works
By Hwang Jae-moon
                   139–161

Chinese Constitutionalist and Revolutionist Views on Chosŏn Korea:
Based on Liáng Qĭchāo and Zhāng Bĭnglín’s Reception of An Chunggŭn
By Yi Hye Gyung
                      163–188

An Chunggŭn and Beyond: Individual Terror in the Korean National
Movement as Seen from Russia/Soviet Union, 1909 to the Early 1930s
By Vladimir Tikhonov
                       189–215

*ARTICLES*

Korean Confucianization of Zen:
Ch’oŭi Ŭisun’s Affirmation of a Confucian Literati Approach
to Buddhism in Late Chosŏn
By Kim Seong-Uk
                      217–240

Moral Success and Failure in the Ethical Theory of
Tasan Chŏng Yagyong
By Baek Min Jeong
                     241–266

Normal Tributary Practice: The Nature of King Kojong’s Policy
toward the United States in the 1880s
By Kim Jinwung
                        267–299

Il’am Yi Ki-ji’s Embassy to Beijing in 1720 and Its Meaning:
Focusing on Comparison with Other Representative
“Records of Embassies to Beijing” (Yŏnhaengnok)
By Jung Jae-Hoon
                      301–329

Exploring Distinctiveness in the Translation of Korean Allusions
By Oh Mihyung, Kim Soonyoung, and Charles Montgomery
 331–360


*LITERATURE IN TRANSLATION*
Writers outside the Gates: Introduction
By Bruce Fulton
                       361–363

“Vertigo” by Unie
Translated by Bruce and Ju-Chan Fulton
            363­–376

“The People Who Lit Up Piŭl-dong” by Yu Seo Hyun
Translated by Azalea Lee
                    377–388

*BOOK REVIEWS*

In the Service of His Korean Majesty: William Nelson Lovatt,
The Pusan Customs, and Sino-Korean Relations, 1876–1888
By Wayne Patterson
James B. Lewis
                        389–393

Intimate Empire: Collaboration and Colonial Modernity in Korea and Japan
By Nayoung Aimee Kwon
Jooyeon Rhee
                         393–396
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