Hannah Kim examines the efforts of nongovernmental actors such as American missionaries, the press, Korean expatriates, social workers, and educators in strengthening Korean and American relations from the early twentieth century through the Cold War.
Hannah Kim examines the efforts of nongovernmental actors such as American missionaries, the press, Korean expatriates, social workers, and educators in strengthening Korean and American relations from the early twentieth century through the Cold War.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hannah Kim is an associate professor of history and a co-coordinator of the social studies education program at the University of Delaware, Newark.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction Chapter One: The Korean Conspiracy Case, 1911: Mission Work, Imperialism, and an Assassination Plot Chapter Two: The Korean Independence Movement, 1919: Korean Expatriates and America’s Moral Diplomacy Chapter Three: The "Forgotten Country," 1941: Pressing the Case for Korean Independence during Wartime Chapter Four: Pied Piper Leads Orphans to the United States, 1955: Evangelical Protestants, the Cold War, and Transracial Adoption from Korea Chapter Five: Death in Philadelphia, 1958: The Murder of In-Ho Oh and the Politics of Cold War America Epilogue: Philadelphia, 1975: A Korean-American Community Emerges Bibliography
Introduction Chapter One: The Korean Conspiracy Case, 1911: Mission Work, Imperialism, and an Assassination Plot Chapter Two: The Korean Independence Movement, 1919: Korean Expatriates and America’s Moral Diplomacy Chapter Three: The "Forgotten Country," 1941: Pressing the Case for Korean Independence during Wartime Chapter Four: Pied Piper Leads Orphans to the United States, 1955: Evangelical Protestants, the Cold War, and Transracial Adoption from Korea Chapter Five: Death in Philadelphia, 1958: The Murder of In-Ho Oh and the Politics of Cold War America Epilogue: Philadelphia, 1975: A Korean-American Community Emerges Bibliography
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