[KS] Kyujanggak Booktalk (Lecture #6 of 2020 Special Lecture Series): Sun Weiguo

MARK E. CAPRIO caprio at rikkyo.ac.jp
Fri Sep 25 01:52:36 EDT 2020


Thank you for the announcement. In what language will Dr. Sun give the
presentation?

Thank you,

Mark Caprio

2020年9月25日(金) 11:37 SNU ICKS <icks at snu.ac.kr>:

>
> Dear Colleagues,
>
> The International Center for Korean Studies, Kyujanggak, Seoul National
> University is hosting a booktalk series, which introduces a work in Korean
> studies to facilitate the exchange of views and information among scholars.
> We will have our 6th booktalk via ZOOM on September 29, 2PM (KST). If you
> would like to join, please register at https://forms.gle/U7t6J7p8nf5XPtPj8.
> Please write your full name and affiliation correctly on the Google Form.
> We will send you the details you need to log in one day in advance. Thanks
> in advance!
>
> About the Book
> The book, which embodies a deeply-researched discourse on the history of
> Sino-Korean relations in the Qing Dynasty, consists of two parts.
> Part I, which has eight chapters and combines political history,
> intellectual history, diplomatic history, and some other key topics such as
> the concept of "Little China", Kijia worship, Guanwang Temple, the ideology
> of "taking revenge for the insult", discusses the evolution of Chosen
> Korean’s attitudes towards Qing dynasty from "honoring the Ming" to
> "submitting to the Qing."
> Part II of the book, consisting of six chapters, focuses on Korea’s
> gradually changing attitude towards Qing China through examining the
> contacts of six Korean envoys to Beijing (Hong Dae-yong, the members of
> Pukhakka, Hong Yang-ho, Yi Sang-jōk, Pak Kyu-su, and Kim Yun-sik) with the
> Qing people.
> In terms of ideology, although Chosen Korea had long since adhered to the
> concept of “Honoring the Ming”, in reality it gradually turned the idea of
> "despising the Qing" into one of "submitting to the Qing" since it had to
> rely on Qing China to resist the intrusion of the West and Japan. This
> change in ideology was a reflection of the changed reality.
> Born in 1966, Ph.D. in China ancient history (Nankai University, 1998),
> and Ph.D. in East Asian history (Hong Kong University of Science and
> Technology, 2001), is a Professor in College of History, Nankai University,
> China now. His major is the Sino-Korean relation history, Korea history,
> Ming-Qing history, and China’s historiography.
>
> About the Author
> Born in 1966, Ph.D. in China ancient history (Nankai University, 1998),
> and Ph.D. in East Asian history (Hong Kong University of Science and
> Technology, 2001), is a Professor in College of History, Nankai University,
> China now. His major is the Sino-Korean relation history, Korea history,
> Ming-Qing history, and China’s historiography.
>
>
> International Center for Korean Studies
>
> #451 Bldg.103 Kyujanggak Institute for Korean Studies
>
> Seoul National University
>
> 1 Gwanak-ro, Gwanak-gu, Seoul
>
> 08826, Republic of Korea
>
> T +82.2.880.9378
>
> http://icks.snu.ac.kr
>
>
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