Korea

Korean Art & Visual Media

  • Cambon, Pierre, and Joseph P. Carroll. The Poetry of Ink: The Korean Literati Tradition, 1392-1910. Exhibit Catalog, Musee national des arts asiatiques Guimet, Paris, 2005.
  • Ch’oe, Sun-t’aek. Treasures from Korea: Art through 5000 Years. London: British Museum Publications, 1984.
  • Ch’oe, Song-eun. “30 Year’s Study of Korean Sculpture (1960-1989): The Unified Silla and Koryo Periods.”Seoul Journal of Korean Studies 4 (1991): 177-200.
  • Chin, Hong-sop. “Sculpture of Koryo Dynasty.”Korea Journal 4:10 (October 1964): 21-25.
  • Chin, Hong-sop. “Silla Sculpture.”Korea Journal 5:5 (May 1965): 38-43.
  • Chin, Hong-sop. “Sculptural Art in the Three Kingdoms.”Korea Journal 6:4 (April 1966): 10-15.
  • Chin, Hong-sop. “The Origin of Korean Sculpture.”Korea Journal 19:4 (April 1979): 17-21.
  • Han’guk Kukche Kyoryu Chaedan. Traditional Painting: Window on the Korean Mind. Korea Essentials; No. 2. Seoul, Korea: Korea Foundation, 2010.
  • Jin Whui-yeon. Coexisting Differences: Women Artists in Contemporary Korean Art (Contemporary Korean Arts Series #7). Hollym International Cooperation, 2012.
  • Kang, Kyong-suk. Korean Ceramics. Seoul: Korea Foundation, 2008.
  • Kim, Hae Yeun. “East Asian Cultural Exchange in Tiger and Dragon Paintings,” https://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/tidra/hd_tidra.htm
  • Kim, Miki Wick. Korean Contemporary Art. Prestel, 2012.
  • Kim, Yong-na. Modern and Contemporary Art in Korea (Korean Culture Series Vol. #1). Hollym International Cooperation, 2005.
  • Koehler, Robert, Daisy Larios, and Hwa-pyeong Kim. Korean Ceramics: The Beauty of Natural Forms. Korea Essentials; No. 11. Seoul, Korea: Seoul Selection, 2012.
  • Mullany, Frank. Symbolism in Korean Ink Brush Painting. Kent: Global Oriental, 2006.
  • Portal, Jane. Korea: Art and Archaeology. New York: Thames & Hudson, 2000.
  • Richardson, Christopher. “North Korea’s Kim dynasty: the making of a personality cult,” The Guardian February 16, 2015. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/feb/16/north-korea-kim-jong-il-birthday
  • Smith, Judith, ed. Arts of Korea. FREE PDF DOWNLOAD: https://www.metmuseum.org/art/metpublications/Arts_of_Korea
  • “Religious Influence on Korean Art.” https://asiasociety.org/education/religious-influence-korean-art
  • The Arts of Korea: A Resource for Educators. FREE PDF DOWNLOAD: https://www.metmuseum.org/-/media/Files/Learn/For%20Educators/Publications%20for%20Educators/korea.pdf
  • Arts of Korea. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1998.

Korean Buddhism, Buddhist Art, Religion

  • Adams, Edward B. “Korean Murals at Muwi-sa.”Orientations 15:3 (March 1984): 36-41.
  • Ahn, Hwi-joon. “An Kyon andA Dream Visit to the Peach Blossom Land.” Oriental Art 26:1 (Spring 1980): 60-71.
  • Ahn, Hwi-joon. “Korean Painting from the Three Kingdoms to Koryo.”Korean Culture 1:2 (Spring 1980): 4-9.
  • Alphan, J. van. The Smile of Buddha: 1600 Years of Buddhist Art in Korea. Bai, 2008.
  • An, Kye-hyon. “Buddha Images in Korean Tradition.”Korea Journal 10:3 (March 1970): 7-14, 22.
  • Best, Jonathan W. “The Sosan Triad: An Early Korean Buddhist Relief Sculpture from Paekche.”Archives of Asian Art 33 (1980): 89-108.
  • Best, Jonathan W. “Early Korea’s Role in the Stylistic Formulation of the Yumedono Kannon, a Major Monument of Seventh-Century Japanese Buddhist Sculpture.”Korea Journal 30:10 (October 1990): 13-26.
  • Buswell Jr., Robert E. , ed. Currents and Countercurrents: Korean Influences on the East Asian Buddhist Traditions. Honolulu:  University of Hawai`i Press,  2005.
  • Buswell, Robert Jr., ed. Religions of Korea in Practice. Princeton:  Princeton University Press, 2007.
  • Buswell, Robert Jr. “Buddhism in Korea.” The Encyclopedia of Religion. 2, pages 421-426. New York:  Macmillan, 1987.
  • Buswell, Robert Jr. The Formation of Ch’an Ideology in China and Korea: The Vajrasamādhi-sūtra, a Buddhist Apocryphon. Princeton, NJ:  Princeton University Press, 1989.
  • Buswell, Robert Jr. Tracing Back the Radiance: Chinul’s Korean Way of Zen.Honolulu:  University of Hawai`i Press, 1991.
  • Buswell, Robert Jr. The Zen Monastic Experience: Buddhist Practice in Contemporary Korea.Princeton, NJ:  Princeton University Press, 1992.
  • Buzo, Adrian, and Tony Prince, trans. Kyunyŏ-jŏn: The Life, Times and Songs of a Tenth-Century Korean Monk.Honolulu:  Hawai`i University Press, 1994.
  • Cho, Eunsu. “Creating a Korean Philosophical Tradition: Pak Chong-hong and the Discomfiting Indispensability of European Thought.”The Review of Korean Studies. 5, No. 2, December 2002.
  • Cho, Eunsu. “Re-thinking Late 19th Century Chosŏn Buddhist Society.”Acta Koreana.  6, No. 2, July 2003.
  • Cho, Eunsu. “Going Beyond Tradition and Striving for the Future: Challenges and Tasks Faced by the Korean Buddhist Community in American Society.”Pacific World: Journal of the Institute of Buddhist Studies.  5, October 2004.
  • Choe, Songeun. “Relationship between Buddhist Sculpture of Shilla and China.”Korea Journal 40:4 (Winter 2000): 24-67.
  • Choi Min Hong. A Modern History of Korean Philosophy Seoul:  Seong Moon Sa, 1978.
  • Chong, Ray Key. “Won Buddhism: A History and Theology of Korea’s New Religion.”Studies in Asian Thought and Religion.  22, Lewiston, Queenston, Lampeter:  The Edwin Mellen Press, 1997.
  • Chung, Bongkil. The Scriptures of Won Buddhism: A Translation of the Wŏnbulgyo kyojŏn with Introduction. Honolulu:  University of Hawai`i Press, 2003.
  • de Bary, Wm. Theodore, ed. The Rise of Neo-Confucianism in Korea. New York: Columbia University Press, 1985.
  • Geumgang Center for Buddhist Studies, ed. Korean Buddhism in East Asian Perspective.Seoul:  Jimoondang, 2007.
  • Goulde, John Isaac. Anti-Buddhist Polemic in Fourteenth and Fifteenth Century Korea: The Emergence of Confucian Exclusivism. Cambridge:  Harvard University, 1985.
  • Grayson, James Huntley. “Religious syncretism in the Shilla period: the relationship between esoteric Buddhism and Korean primeval religion [photo].”Asian Folklore Studies.  43:2, pages 185-198. 1984.
  • Grayson, James Huntley. Early Buddhism and Christianity in Korea: A Study in the Emplantation of Religion. Leiden:  E.J. Brill, 1985.
  • Jorgensen, John. “A social analysis of Korean Buddhism and its future prospects.” Nokwŏn sǔnim kohǔi ki’nyŏm haksul nonch’ong kanhaeng wiwŏnhoe, ed. The Direction of Korean Buddhism. pages 321-372. 1997.
  • Kang, U-bang. Korean Buddhist Sculpture: Art and Truth. Chicago: Art Media Resources, 2005.
  • Kang, Woo Bang. “Stylistic Changes in Buddhist Sculpture in Early Unified Silla.” InInternational Symposium of the Conservation and Restoration of Cultural Property: Periods of Transition in East Asian Art. Tokyo: Tokyo National Research Institute of Cultural Properties, 1988.
  • Keel, Hee-Sung. “Buddhism and Political Power in Korean History.”Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies.  1, pages 9-24. 1978.
  • Kim, Jae-Woong (Gim Jaeung). Polishing the Diamond, Enlightening the Mind: Reflections of a Korean Buddhist Master. Boston:  Wisdom Publications, 1999.
  • Kim, Jongmyung (Gim Jeongmyeong). “Buddhist rituals in medieval Korea (918-1392).” 1994.
  • Kim, Lena.Buddhist Sculpture of Korea. Seoul: Hollym, 2007.
  • Kim, Won-yong. “Buddhist Sculpture of Korea.” In Kim Won-yong.Art and Archaeology of Ancient Korea. Seoul: The Taekwang Publishing Co., 1986.
  • Koh, Susan F. “Shamans and Buddhas: Women and Religion in Early Korea.” June 1988.
  • Korean Buddhist Research Institute, ed. Buddhist Thought in Korea. Seoul: Dongguk University Press, 1994.
  • Kusan, Sŏnsa. The Way of Korean Zen [1st ed.]. New York: Weatherhill, 1985.
  • Kwak, Dong-seok. “Korean Gilt-Bronze Single Mandorla Buddha Triads and the Dissemination of East Asian Sculptural Style.” InTransmitting the Forms of Divinity: Early Buddhist Art from Korea and Japan, ed. Washizuka Hiromitsu, Park Youngbok, and Kang Woo-bang. New York: Japan Society, 2003.
  • Lancaster, Lewis R. and Sung Bae Park. The Korean Buddhist Canon: A Descriptive Catalog. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1979.
  • Lancaster, Lewis R. and Chai-shin Yu, ed. Introduction of Buddhism to Korea: New Cultural Patterns. Berkeley, Calif.:  Asian Humanities Press, 1989.
  • Lancaster, Lewis R. and Kikun Suh, Chai-shin Yu, ed. Buddhism in Koryŏ: A Royal Religion. UC Berkeley:  Institute for East Asian Studies, 1996.
  • Lena Kim. Buddhist Sculpture of Korea. Korean Culture Series. Seoul: Hollym, 2007.
  • Little, Stephen. “A Korean Gilt-Bronze Sculpture of Kshitigarbha Bodhisattva.”Orientations 34:7 (September 2003): 52-56.
  • McCallum, Donald F. “Korean Influence on Early Japanese Buddhist Sculpture.”Korean Culture 3:1 (March 1982): 22-29.
  • McCallum, Donald F. “The Buddhist Triad in Three Kingdoms Sculpture.”Korean Culture 16:4 (Winter 1995): 18-35.
  • McClung, David H. “The Founding of the Royal Dragon Monastery: Translated, with Annotations, from Iryŏn’s Samguk Yusa.”Transactions of the Royal Asiatic Society, Korea Branch.  53, pages 69-80. 1978.
  • Mercer, Timothy J. An Analysis and Evaluation of the Concept of Righteousness as used in Korea within the Religions of Buddhism, Confucianism, Shamanism and Wesleyan-Arminian Christianity. Boston:  Roberts Brothers, 1990.
  • Mu Soeng. Thousand Peaks: Korean Zen–Tradition and Teachers.Cumberland, RI:  Primary Point Press, 1987.
  • Muller, A. Charles. Hamhŏ Kihwa: A Study of his Major Works. SUNY, Stony Brook:  1993.
  • Muller, A. Charles. The Sutra of Perfect Enlightenment: Korean Buddhism’s Guide to Meditation (with the commentary by the Sŏn monk Kihwa). Albany, New York:  SUNY Press,  1999.
  • Pak, Youngsook, and Roderick Whitfield.Handbook of Korean Art, vol. 1: Buddhist Sculpture. London: Laurence King and Yekyong Publishers, 2002.
  • Park, Pori.  The Modern Remaking of Korean Buddhism: the Korean Reform Movement during Japanese Colonial Rule and Han Yongun’s Buddhism (1879-1944). University of California at Los Angeles, 1998.
  • Park, Jin Young.  “Religious Conflict or Religious Anxiety: New Buddhist Movements in Korea and Japan.”Religious Studies and Theology.  17(2), pages 34-46. December 1998.
  • Park, Sung Bae (Bak Seongbae). Buddhist Faith and Sudden Enlightenment. Albany: SUNY Press, 1983.
  • Rhie, Marylin M. “The Korean Buddhist Image: Embodiment of the Transcendent.”Korean Culture 5:1 (March 1984): 5-15.
  • Rhie, Marylin M. “Buddhist Sculpture of the Early Koryo Dynasty.”Korean Culture 8:3 (Fall 1987): 13-24.
  • Rhie, Marylin M. “Buddhist Sculpture of the Early Koryo Dynasty.”Korean Culture 9:2 (Summer 1988): 16-29.
  • Rhie, Marylin M. “Early Koryo Buddhist Sculpture.”Korean Culture 13:2 (Summer 1992): 26-34.
  • Shim, Jae-Ryong. The Philosophical Foundation of Korean Zen Buddhism: The Integration of Sŏn and Kyo by Chinul (1158-1210). Honolulu:  University of Hawai`i , 1979.
  • Shin-yong, ed. Buddhist Culture in Korea.
  • Sorensen, Henrik H. The History and Doctrines of Early Korean Sŏn Buddhism. Copenhagen:  University of Copenhagen, 1987.
  • Tedesco, Frank M. “Sleeping Wisdom Awakens: Korean Buddhism in the 1990s. (Vitality in Korean Buddhist Tradition).”Korea Journal.  33, n3 (Autumn), 1993.
  • Till, Barry. “Korean Burial Figurines: A Mortuary Custom Adopted from China.”Korean Culture 11:3 (Fall 1990): 8-17.
  • Till, Barry. “Stone Sculptures at Korea’s ‘Emperor-Style’ Tombs.”Korean Culture 13:2 (Summer 1992): 4-11.
  • Won, Ui-bom. A History of Korean Buddhist Culture and some essays-the Buddhist Pure Land and the Christian Kingdom of Heaven. Seoul, Korea:  Jip Moon Dang Pub., 1992.
  • Yeu, B.M. “Analysis of Korean Megalithic Buddha Using Photogrammetric and Laser Scanning System.”International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing 33:B5/2 (2000): 908-913.
  • A Journey of Soul: The Buddhist Painting of the Joseon Period. National Museum of Korea, Seoul, 2009.

Korean Society and Aesthetics

  • Armstrong, Charles K (ed). Korean Society: Civil Society, Democracy and the State. 2002
  • Clark, Donald N. Culture and Customs of Korea (Culture and Customs of Asia Series). Greenwood Publishing Group, 2000.
  • De Mente, Boye. The Korean Mind: Understanding Contemporary Korean Culture. Tokyo; Rutland, Vt.: Tuttle Pub., 2012.
  • Hoffman, Diane. Lanterns on the River: Essays on Life and Culture in Contemporary South Korea. Rowman & Littlefield, 1999.
  • Kim, Elaine H.(ed), Chungmoo Choi (Editor). Dangerous Women: Gender and Korean Nationalism. 1997.

Korean Literature

  • Aldridge, A. Owen. “Two Court Autobiographers of the Eighteenth Century: Voltaire and Lady Hong of Korea.” Seoul Journal of Korean Studies 4 (December 1991): 59-72.
  • Baek, Eunice H. “Through the Eyes of Children: Postwar Modern Korean Literature.” Korean Culture 11:4 (Winter 1990): 24-29.
  • Bantly, Francisca Cho. Embracing Illusion: Truth and Fiction in ‘The Dream of the Nine Clouds.’ Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 1996.
  • Barraclough, Ruth. “Tales of Seduction: Factory Girls in Korean Proletarian Literature.” Positions: East Asia Cultures Critique 14:2 (Fall 2006): 345-371.
  • Bouchez, Daniel. “A Neo-Confucian View of Literature: Kim Ch’unt’aek’s Comments on the ‘Namjong-ki.'” Korea Journal 19:5 (May 1979): 27-32.
  • Buzo, Adrian. “Koryo Kayo: Songs of the Koryo Period.” Korea Journal 19:10 (October 1979): 32-41.
  • Capener, Stephen. “Paradise Found: Recovery and Redemption in Yi Hyoseok’s Later Literature.” Seou Journal of Korean Studies 22:1 (June 2009): 73-92.
  • Cha, Kil, and Michael J. Pettid, tr. Unyong-jon: A Love Affair at the Royal Palace of Choson Korea. Berkeley: Institute of East Asian Studies, University of California, Berkeley, 2009.
  • Chang, Tok-sun. “Literary Magazines in the Past.” Korea Journal 2:8 (August 1962): 19-21, 45.
  • Chang, Tok-sun. “Romantic Stories of Yi Dynasty.” Korea Journal 3:1 (January 1963): 19-22.
  • Chang, Tok-sun. “Living Myths in Modern Korean Literature.” Korea Journal 8:9 (September 1968): 8-14.
  • Chang, Tok-sun. “Exceptional Poems on Non-Poetic Themes.” Korea Journal13:3 (March 1973): 24-29.
  • Chang, Tok-sun. “Humour in Old Korean Novels.” In Humour in Korean Literature. Seoul: International Cultural Foundation 1977.
  • Cheon, Jeong-Hwan. “The Process of the Formation and Diversification of the Readers of Korean Prose Fiction in the 1920s and 1930s.” Seoul Journal of Korean Studies 15 (2002): 29-74.
  • Cheung, Dominic. “The ‘Ghost Wife’ Themes in China, Japan, and Korea: New Tales of the Trimmed LampTales of Moonlight and Rain, and New Tales of the Golden Carp.” Tamkang Review 15:1-4 (Autumn 1984-Summer 1985): 151-174.
  • Childs, Cynthia. “Songs from the Inner Rooms: The Poetry of Ho Nansorhon.” Acta Koreana 4 (2001): 143-155.
  • Cho, Dong-Il. “Biography and Confession.” Seoul Journal of Korean Studies 15 (2002): 19-28.
  • Cho, Hee-woong. Korean Folktales. Seoul: Jimoondang Publishing Co., 1998.
  • Cho, Oh Kon. “The Traditional Korean Puppet Drama: A Mirror of Satire in the Feudal Society.” Asian and Pacific Quarterly of Cultural and Social Affairs 13:1 (Spring 1981): 40-50.
  • Cho, Tong-il. “What is Korean Literature?” In Yong-jik Kim and Chan-kyung Sung, eds. Making of Korean Literature. Seoul: Korean Culture and Arts Foundation, 1986.
  • Cho, Tong-il. “Traditional Forms of the Narrative and the Modern Novel in Korea.” Pigyo munhak 16 (1991): 156-162.
  • Cho, Yon-Hyon. “Since the Liberation: Modern Korean Literature.” Korea Journal 7:12 (December 1967): 4-13.
  • Choi, Kyeong-Hee. “Impaired Body as Colonial Trope: Kang Kyong’ae’s ‘ Underground Village.’” Public Culture 13:3 (Fall 2001): 431-458.
  • Choi, Won-Oh. An Illustrated Guide to Korean Mythology. Kent, U.K.: Global Oriental, 2008.
  • Choi, Won-shik. “Rethinking Korean Literary Modernity.” Korea Journal 35:4 (Winter 1995): 5-25.
  • Choi, Won-shik. “Seoul, Tokyo, New York: Modern Korean Literature Seen through Yi Sang’s ‘Lost Flowers’.” Korea Journal 39:4 (Winter 1999): 118-143.
  • Frankl, John M. “Images of ‘The Foreign’ in Pre-Modern Korean Fiction.” In Embracing the Other: The Interaction of Korean and Foreign Cultures: Proceedings of the 1st World Congress of Korean Studies, III. Songnam, Republic of Korea: The Academy of Korean Studies, 2002.
  • Fulton, Bruce. “Colonial and Modernist Origins of the Early Short Fiction of Hwang Sun-won.” Acta Koreana 6:1 (January 2003): 23-33.
  • Grayson, James H. “Some Patterns of Korean Folk Narrative.” Korea Journal16:1 (January 1976): 15-18.
  • Grayson, James H. “Foundation Myths, Sacred Sites and Ritual: The Case of the Myth of the Tree Clan Ancestors of Chejudo Island.” Korea Journal 38:4 (Winter 1998): 300-330.
  • Han, Susanne C. Korean Folk & Fairy Tales. Hollym, 1991.
  • Heyman, Alan C. “P’an-sori: The Narrative-Epic Folk Drama of Korea.” Asian and Pacific Quarterly of Cultural and Social Affairs 19:2 (Winter 1987): 51-56.
  • Hirakawa, Sukehiro. “Was She Really Reconciled? – Ghost Wife Stories in Chinese, Korean, Japanese and American Literatures.” Tamkang Review 18:1-4 (Autumn 1987-Summer 1988): 187-198.
  • Hoyt, James, tr. Songs of the Dragons Flying to Heaven: A Korean Epic. Seoul: Royal Asiatic Society, Korea Branch, 1979.
  • Hwang Pae-Gang, Young-Hie Han (Translator), Se-Jung Kim (Translator), Seung-Pyung Chwae (Translator). Korean Myths and Folk Legends. Jain Publishing Company, 2006.
  • Kim, Chong-un. “Postwar Korean Society and the Short Story: The Case of Son Ch’ang-sop.” Korea Journal 26:4 (April 1986): 23-31.
  • Kim, Jaihiun J. Classical Korean Poetry. Jain Publishing Company, 1995.
  • Kim, Richard E. Lost Names: Scenes from Korean Boyhood. Berkeley:  University of California Press, 1998.  In this novel, Kim writes of seven scenes from a childhood in Korea during the Japanese occupation.
  • Kim, Kichung. An Introduction to Classical Korean Literature: From Hyangga to P’Ansori. Sharpe, M.e., Inc. 1996.
  • Kim, Yong-jik. “Humor in Modern Korean Poems.” Korea Journal 10:4 (April 1970): 8-10, 18.
  • Kim, Yong-jik. “Korean Poetry under Japanese Rule.” Korea Journal 13:9 (September 1973): 54-58.
  • Koh, Chang-soo.Best Loved Poems of Korea.  Hollym, 1984.
  • Lee, Peter H., ed. Anthology of Korean Literature: From Early Times to the 19th Century.  Honolulu:  University of Hawaii Press, 1981.
  • Lee, Peter. Modern Korean Literature: An Anthology. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1990.
  • McCann, David R. Early Korean Literature: Selections and Introductions. Columbia University Press, 2000.
  • McCann, David R. Black Crane: An Anthology of Korean Literature. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1997 & 1980.
  • McCune, Evelyn. The Arts of Korean: An Illustrated History. Rutland, Vermont: Tuttle, 1962.
  • Park, Linda Sue. A Single Shard. Dell Yearling Book, Random House, New York, 2001.
  • Sallee, Hyun-Jae Yee, ed. The Snowy Road and Other Stories: An Anthology of Korean Fiction.  New York:  White Pine Press, 1993.
  • Song, Cathy. Picture Bride. Yale University Press, 1983.
  • Wei, Xin. “Song China’s Role in Shaping Late Koryo Literature: An Analytical Survey of the Tongmunson.” Acta Koreana 10:1 (January 2007): 37-68.
  • Wong Janet S. A Suitcase of Seaweed and Other Poems. Simon & Schuster Children’s, 1996.
  • Yoh, Suk-kee. “Traditional Korean Plays and Humor: With Special Reference to Sandae Mask Play.” Korea Journal 10:5 (May 1970): 19-22.
  • Yoon, Hong-key. “An Analysis of Korean Geomancy Tales.” Asian Folklore Studies 34 (1975): 21-34.
  • Yu, Pyong-ch’on. “Korean Writers in America.” Korea Journal 7:12 (December 1967): 17-19.
  • Zong, In-sob. A Guide to Korean Literature: Paying Special Attention to the Influence of Western Literature on the Development of Modern Korean Culture. Elizabeth, N.J.: Hollym International Corp., 1982.
  • Zur, Dafna. “Representations of the Korean War in North and South Korean Children’s Literature.” In Korea 2010: Politics, Economy, Society, ed. Rudiger Frank, James E. Hoare, Patrick Kollner, and Susan Pares. Leiden: Brill, 2010.
  • Zur, Dafna. “The Korean War in Children’s Picturebooks of the DPRK.”  In Exploring North Korean Arts, ed. Rudiger Frank. Nurnberg: Verlag für Moderne Kunst, 2011.

Korean Music

  • Ahn, Choong-sik. The Story of Western Music in Korea: A Social History, 1885-1950. Houston: eBookstand Books, 2005.
  • Chang, Hwiju. “A Study of Yongsan chakpop.” Tongyang umak 21 (1999): 145-149.
  • Chang, Sa-hun. “Korean Traditional Music.” East Asian Review 2:3 (Autumn 1975): 317-337.
  • Chang, Sa-hun. “Transmutation of Korean Music.” Korea Journal 16:12 (December 1976): 15-19.
  • Chang, Sa-hun. “Korean and Chinese Chongjae.” Korea Journal 18:2 (February 1978): 14-25.
  • Chang, Sa-hun. “Education in Classical Korean Music, Past and Present.” Korea Journal 20:11 (November 1980): 39-45.
  • Chang, Yon-ok. “Social Change and Changes in Musical Systems in the Early 20th Century Korea.” Hanguk chont’ong ŭmakhak 3 (2002:12): 309-326.
  • Cho, Euiyon. “Traditional Korean Music, Nong-ak, and Pansori: Their History and Features.” Asian Culture Quarterly 17:3 (Fall 1989): 30-35.
  • Cho, Hyunjong. “The Musical Instruments of Prehistoric Korea.” The International Journal of Korean Art and Archaeology 3 (2009): 25-47.
  • Chon, Inpyong. “The Triple Musical Form of Southeast Asian and Korean Music.” In Indian Culture and Asian Culture. Calcutta: Asiatic Society, 1995.
  • Chun, In-Pyong. “Man Zhong Kuai Musical Form in Chinese and Korean Music.” Sonus 20:2 (2000): 5-15.
  • Codesaca, Maria Silvia. “Kaya-go and Other Korean Strings Instruments.” Korea Journal 15:4 (April 1975): 63-65.
  • Condit, Jonathan. “Uncovering Earlier Melodic Forms from Modern Performance: The Kasa ” Asian Music 9:2 (1978): 3-20.
  • Condit, Jonathan. “A Fifteenth Century Korean Score in Mensural Notation.” Musica Asiatica 2 (1979): 1-88.
  • Condit, Jonathan. Music of the Korean Renaissance: Songs and Dances of the Fifteenth Century. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1984.
  • Du, Yaxiong. “The Construction of Sanjo and Its Numbering System.” Hanguk umaksa hakpo 29 (2002:12): 705-715.
  • Finchum-Sung, Hilary. “New Folksongs: Shin Minyo of the 1930s.” In Keith Howard, ed. Korean Pop: Riding the Wave. Kent, England: Global Oriental, 2006.
  • Hahn, Man-young. “Traditional Music of Korea.” In Suh Cheong-Soo and Pak Chun-kun, eds. Aspects of Korean Culture. Seoul: Soodo Women’s Teachers College Press, 1974.
  • Hahn, Man-young. “Religious Origins of Korean Music.” Korea Journal 15:7 (July 1975): 17-22.
  • Hahn, Man-young. Kugak: Studies in Korean Traditional Music. Seoul: Tamgu Dang, 1990.
  • Han, Heungsub. “Traditional Korean Music: Its Genres and Aesthetics.” Korea Journal 47:3 (Autumn 2007): 76-103.
  • Han, Myung-hee. “Music, Dance, Drama and Games.” In Korean National Commission for UNESCO, ed. Kyongju: City of Millenial History. Elizabeth, NJ: Hollym International Corp., 1998.
  • Han, Young-sook and Lee Mi-kyong. “Traditional Dances of Korea.” In Suh Cheong-Soo and Pak Chun-kun, eds. Aspects of Korean Culture. Seoul: Soodo Women’s Teachers College Press, 1974.
  • Howard, Keith. “Bands and Songs: Historical Precedents for the Contemporary Confluence of Rural and Urban Folk Music Styles in Korea.” World of Music 28:2 (1986): 14-25.
  • Howard, Keith. “The Korean Kayagum: The Making of a Korean Zither.” Papers of the British Association of Korean Studies 5 (1994): 1-22.
  • Howard, Keith. “Lee Hye-ku and the Development of Korean Musicology.” Acta Koreana 5:1 (2002): 75-96.
  • Howard, Keith. Creating Korean Music: Tradition, Innovation, and the Discourse of Identity. Aldershot, UK: Ashgate, 2006.
  • Hwang, Byong-ki. “Aesthetic Characteristics of Korean Music in Theory and in Practice.” Asian Music 9:2 (1978): 29-40.
  • Hwang, Byung-ki. “Beat: In Search of the Original Form of Korean Culture.” Acta Koreana 9:1 (January 2006): 1-11.
  • Killick, Andrew P. “The Choson Songak Yon’guhoe and the Advent of Mature Ch’angguk ” The Review of Korean Studies 1 (September 1998): 76-100.
  • Killick, Andrew P. “Ch’angguk Opera and the Category of the ‘Traditionesque.’” Korean Studies 25:1 (2001): 51-71.
  • Killick, Andrew P. “The Traditional Opera of the Future?: Ch’angguk’s First Century.” In Nathan Hesselink, ed. Contemporary Directions: Korean Folk Music Engaging the Twentieth Century and Beyond. Berkeley: Institute of East Asian Studies, University of California, 2001.
  • Killick, Andrew P. “Jockeying for Tradition: The Checkered History of Korean Ch’angguk Opera.” Asian Theatre Journal 20:1 (Spring 2003): 43-70.
  • Kim, Byong-Kon. “Aesthetics in Kagok: The Musics of Yi Intellectuals.” Yesulwonbo 33 (1989): 149-172.
  • Kim, Chong-ja. “Melodic Embellishment in Korean Royal Ancestral Shrine Music.” Hanguk umak yongu 2 (1981): 53-68.
  • Kim, Jin-gyun. “The Influence of Christianity in Korea’s Development: Viewed from Aspect of Music.” (Kyemyong taehak tongso munhwa yonguso) Tongso munhwa 7 (1974): 213-248.
  • Kim, Jong-Su. “Cultural Heritage of Seoul: Music in the Joseon Dynasty.” In Seoul Museum of History. Seoul: Seoul Museum of History, 2002.
  • Kim, Yangdong.  “An Etymological Study of the Origin of Ancient Korean Music Based on ‘Sori(Sound)’ and ‘Norae (Song)’ as Derivates of ‘Sin(God).’” Acta Koreana 12:1 (June 2009): 123-145.
  • Kim, Yong-mann. “Korean Traditional Music: The History of its Relations with Chinese Music (I), (II).” Korean Culture 10:4 (Winter 1989): 23-33; 11:2 (Summer 1990): 13-17.
  • Kim, Young-woon. “Changes in the Twentieth Century Korean Folksong: Centering on Gaeseongnonbongga.” The Review of Korean Studies 6:2 (December 2003): 191-231.
  • Kwon, Tohui. “Reorganization of Musical Groups in the Beginning of the 20th Century.” Tongyang umak 20 (1998:12): 269-287.
  • Kwon, Donna Lee. Music in Korea: Experiencing Music, Expressing Culture. New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012.
  • Lee, Baik-chun. “Jazz in Postwar Korea.” Korea Journal 4:9 (September 1964): 21-23.
  • Lee, Byong Won. “Structural Formulae of Melodies in the Two Sacred Buddhist Chant Styles in Korea.” Korean Studies 1 (1977): 111-196.
  • Lee, Byong Won. Korean Court Music and Dance.” World of Music 23:1 (1981): 35-49.
  • Lee, Byong Won. Buddhist Music of Korea. Seoul: Jungeumsa, 1987.
  • Lee, Byongwon. “Western Staff Notation and Its Impact on Korean Musical Practice.” Tongyang umak 22 (2000): 89-96.
  • Lee, Byong Won, and Yong-shik Lee, eds. Music of Korea. Seoul: National Center for Korean Traditional Performing Arts, 2007.
  • Lee, Hye-ku. “Traditional Music.” In Sung-nyong Lee, ed. Korean Studies Today: Development and State of the Field. Seoul: Institute of Asian Studies, Seoul National University, 1970.
  • Lee, Hye-ku. “Introduction to Korean Music.” Korea Journal 16:12 (December 1976): 4-14.
  • Lee, Hye-ku. An Introduction to Korean Music and Dance. Seoul: The Royal Asiatic Society, Korea Branch, 1977.
  • Lee, Hye-ku. Essays on Korean Traditional Music. Seoul: Seoul Computer Press for The Royal Asiatic Society, Korea Branch, 1981.
  • Lee, Hye-ku, comp. and ed. Korean Musical Instruments. Seoul: National Classical Music Institute of Korea, 1982.
  • Lee, Kang-sook. “Korean Music Culture.” In Traditional Korean Music. Seoul: The Si-sa-yong-o-sa Publishers, Inc., 1983.
  • Lee, Yong-Shik. “Pookchung Lion Dance Music.” Sonus 20:2 (2000): 57-67.
  • Lim, Mi-sun. “The Function of Music in Court Ceremonies of the Choson Period.” In Sang-Oak Lee and Duk-Soo Park, eds. Perspectives on Korea. Sydney: Wild Peony, 1998.
  • Lee, Sang-Man. “The Essential Characteristics of Korean Traditional Music.” Asian and Pacific Quarterly of Cultural and Social Affairs 8:3 (Winter 1976): 40-44.
  • Lee, Young Mee. “The Beginnings of Korean Pop: Popular Music during the Japanese Occupation Era (1910-45).” In Keith Howard, ed. Korean Pop: Riding the Wave. Kent, England: Global Oriental, 2006.
  • Maliangkay, Roald. “Supporting Our Boys: American Military Entertainment and Korean Pop Music in the 1950s and Early-1960s.” In Keith Howard, ed. Korean Pop: Riding the Wave. Kent, England: Global Oriental, 2006.
  • Maliangkay, Roald. “Their Masters’ Voice: Korean Traditional Music SPs (Standard Play Records) under Japanese Colonial Rule.” The World of Music49:3 (2007): 53-74.
  • Min, Eungi. “The Westernization and a Struggle for the Cultural Identity: A History and Perspective of the National Music in Korea.” Ŭmak iron yŏngu 9 (2004): 105-129.
  • Park, Mikyung. “Confucian Symbolism in the Court Ritual Music of Korea.” Journal of Asian Culture 4 (Spring 1980): 143-153.
  • Pratt, Keith L. Korean Music: Its History and Its Performance. London: Faber Music in association with Jun Eum Sa Publishing Corp., 1987.
  • Provine, Robert C., Jr. “The Sacrifice to Confucius in Korea and Its Music.” Transactions of the Royal Asiatic Society, Korea Branch 50 (1975): 43-69.
  • Provine, Robert C., Jr. “Who’s in Charge Here?: The Musical Bureaucracy in the Early Yi Dynasty Court (1392-1466).” Asian Music 9:2 (1978): 48-58.
  • Provine, Robert C., Jr. “‘Chinese’ Ritual Music in Korea: The Origins, Codifications, and Cultural Role of Aak.” Korea Journal 20:2 (February 1980): 16-25.
  • Provine, Robert C., Jr. “The Korean Courtyard Ensemble for Ritual Music (Aak).” Yearbook for Traditional Music 24 (1982): 91-117.
  • Provine, Robert C., Jr. “Brief Introduction to Traditional Korean Folk Music.” In Traditional Korean Music. Seoul: The Si-sa-yong-o-sa Publishers, Inc., 1983.
  • Provine, Robert C., Jr. “‘Chinese’ Ritual Music in Korea.” In Traditional Korean Music. Seoul: The Si-sa-yong-o-sa Publishers, Inc., 1983.
  • Provine, Robert C., Jr. “Korean Music in Historical Perspective.” World of Music 27:2 (1985): 3-13.
  • Provine, Robert C., Jr. “The Nature and Extent of Surviving Chinese Musical Influence on Korea.” World of Music 29:2 (1987): 5-16.
  • Provine, Robert C., Jr. Essays on Sino-Korean Musicology: Early Sources for Korean Ritual Music. Seoul: Iljisa Publishing Company, 1988.
  • Provine, Robert C., Jr. “State Sacrificial Rites and Ritual Music in Early Chosen.” Kugagwon nonmunjip 1 (1989): 239-307.
  • Provine, Robert C., Jr. “King Sejong and Music.” In Young-Key Kim-Renaud, ed. King Sejong the Great: The Light of 15th Century Korea. Washington, D.C.: International Circle of Korean Linguistics, 1992.
  • Provine, Robert C., Jr. “Korea.” In Helen Myers, ed. Ethnomusicology: Historical and Regional Studies. London: Macmillan, 1993.
  • Provine, Robert C., Yosihiko Tokumaru, and C. Lawrence Witzleben, eds. The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music, Volume 7: East Asia: China, Japan, and Korea. London: Routledge, 2002.
  • Rockwell, Coralie J. “Kayago: The Origin and Evolution of the Korean Twelve-string Zither.” Transactions of the Royal Asiatic Society, Korea Branch 49 (1974): 26-47.
  • Sheen, Dae-Cheol. “Some Koreanized Aspects of Chinese Music in the History of Korean Music.” (Soul taehakkyo umak taehak pusol Tongyang umak yonguso) Minjok umakhak 19 (1997:11): 97-121.
  • Sheen, Dae-Cheol.  “Korean Music in the 19th Century.” SOAS-AKS Working Papers in Korean Studies, no. 12 (December 2009): http://www.soas.ac.uk/koreanstudies/research/soas-aks/soas-aks-papers/file55350.pdf.
  • Shin, Eui Hang, and Joong-Hwan Oh. “Changing Patterns of Social Network Structure in Composer-Singer Relationships: A Case Study of the Korean Popular Music Industry, 1927-1997.” East Asia: An International Quarterly 20:1 (Spring 2002): 24-54.
  • Shin, Hyunjoon, and Ho Tung-hung. “Translation of ‘America’ during the Early Cold War Period: A Comparative Study on the History of Popular Music in South Korea and Taiwan.” Inter-Asia Cultural Studies 10:1 (March 2009): 83-102.
  • So, In-hwa. “Music Reflected in the 19th Century Folding Screens of Court Banquets and Congratulatory Ceremonies.” In So Inhwa, Pak Chonghye, and Chudi Panjail, eds. Choson shidae chinyon chinch’an chinha pyongp’ung.Seoul: Kungnip kugagwon, 2000.
  • So, Inhwa. Theoretical Perspectives on Korean Traditional Music: An Introduction. Seoul: The National Center for Korean Traditional Performing Arts, Ministry of Culture and Tourism, 2002.
  • Song, Bang-song. “Ritual Traditions of Korea.” Asian Music 8:2 (1977): 26-46.
  • Song, Bang-song. Source Readings in Korean Music. Seoul: Korean National Commission for Unesco, 1980.
  • Song, Bang-song and Keith Pratt. “The Unique Flavor of Korean Music.” Korean Culture 1:3 (Summer 1980): 4-14.
  • Song, Bang-song. “Korean Musicology: Its Historical Development and Problems.” Korea Journal 20:11 (November 1980): 11-26.
  • Song, Hye-jin. A Stroll through Korean Music History. Seoul: National Center for Korean Traditional Performing Arts, 2000.
  • Song, Kyong-nin. “Korean Court Dance.” Korea Journal 16:12 (December 1976): 20-24.
  • Suhr, Moon Ja Minn. “Confucian Ritual Ceremony in Korea: Music and Dance.” Korean Culture 10:1 (Spring 1989): 29-39.
  • Sur, Donald. “Tonal Arrangements in Korean Classical Music.” Korean Culture1:3 (Summer 1980): 15-18.
  • Sutton, R. Anderson. “Korean Music in Hawaii.” Asian Music 19:1 (Fall-Winter 1987): 99-120.
  • Um, Hae-kyung. Korean Musical Drama: Pʻansori and the Making of Tradition in Modernity. SOAS Musicology Series. Farnham, Surrey, England: Ashgate, 2013.
  • Wells, Marnix. “The Blue Skye Song and Triple Rhythms in King Sejong’s Scores.” Acta Koreana 9:2 (July 2006): 59-96.
  • Willoughby, Heather. “The Sound of Han: P’ansori, Timbre, and a Korean Ethos of Pain and Suffering.” Yearbook for Traditional Music 32 (2000): 15-30.
  • Yi, Po-hyong. “Performing Style of Korean Traditional Music.” In Traditional Korean Music. Seoul: The Si-sa-yong-o-sa Publishers, Inc., 1983.
  • Yi, Po-hyong. “Musical Study on Arirang.” Korea Journal 28:7 (July 1988): 35-47.
  • Yi, Pyongwon.  “Musical Acculturation during the Colonial Period: A Global Perspective and Critical Assessment.” Tongyang ŭmak 27 (2005): 1-21.
  • Yi, Yong-min.  “The Development of Western-style Orchestral Music in Korea: The Early Years.” (Sŏngshin Yŏja Taehakkyo) Yŏngu nonmunjip 25 (1987:2): 357-388.
  • Yi, Yongsik.  “The Invention of Tradition: Modernization, Nationalization, and Popularization of Arirang during the Japanese Colonial Period (1910-1945) in Korea.” Tongyang ŭmak 27 (2005): 127-158.

Korean Architecture/Gardens

  • Bongryoi, Kim and Sajid Rizvi. The Secret Spirit of Korean Architecture.
  • Chun, Jin-Hee, et al. Hanoak: Traditional Korean Homes.
  • Inaji, Toshirō, and Virgilio, Pamela. The Garden as Architecture: Form and Spirit in the Gardens of Japan, China, and Korea. 1st ed. Tokyo; New York: Kodansha International, 1998.
  • Hŏ, Kyun., and Baker, Donald L. Gardens of Korea: Harmony with Intellect and Nature. Saffron Korea Library (Series); No. 4. London, UK: Saffron Books, 2005.
  • Inaji, Toshiro and Pamela Virgillo. The Garden as Architecture: Form and Spirit in the Gardens of Japan, China, and Korea.
  • Iwatate, Marcia, and Kim Unsoo. Korea Style.
  • Jackson, Ben and Robert Koehler. Korean Architecture: Breathing with Nature (Korea Essentials No. 12).
  • Jung, Inha and Ronald G. Knapp. Architecture and Urbanism in Modern Korea (Spatial Habitus: Making Meaning in Asia’s Architecture.
  • Kim, Dong-uk. Palaces of Korea Korean Culture Series).
  • Kim, Sung-woo. Buddhist Architecture of Korea. 2007.
  • Korean National Arboretum. Traditional Korean Gardens: Representative gardens of the Joseon period. 2012.
  • McCafferty, Georgia. “South Korean architects look to the past in their push to modernize.” CNN. July 20, 2017. https://www.cnn.com/style/article/korean-traditional-hanok/index.html
  • Park, Nani and Robert J. Fouser. Hanok: The Korean House.
  • Quarrington, Dale. Korean Temples: Art, Architecture and History. 2016.
  • Rossbach, Sarah and Lin Yun. Living Color: Master Lin Yuns Guide to Feng Shui and the Art of Color.
  • Roy, Jacob. “10 most impressive modern architecture in Korea.” 10 Magazine. October 25, 2016. https://www.10mag.com/10-modern-contemporary-architecture-spaces-in-korea/
  • Tändler, Daniel. “Hanok: Reconfiguring Traditional Architecture in Seoul.” Korea Expose. May 10, 2015. https://www.koreaexpose.com/hanok-reconfiguring-traditional-architecture-in-seoul/
  • Yim, Seock-jae. The Traditional Space: A Study of Korean Architecture. Seoul: Ewha Womans University Press, 2005.
  • Yim, Seock-jae. City as Art: 100 Notable Works of Architecture in Seoul. 2011.

Korea Pop Culture

  • Acuna, Kirsten. “Millions in Korea are obsessed with these revolutionary comics — now they’re going global” Business Insider, February 11, 2016. http://www.businessinsider.com/what-is-webtoons-2016-2
  • Choi, JungBong and Ronald Malingkay. K-pop: The International Rise of the Korean Music Industry.
  • Gateward, Frances. Seoul Searching: Culture and Identity in Contemporary Korean Cinema.
  • Gravett, Paul. “Make Mine Manhwa!: Exporting Korean Comics,” September 27, 2009. http://www.paulgravett.com/articles/article/make_mine_manhwa
  • Hoare, James. Korea—Culture Smart! The Essential Guide to Customs & Culture.
  • Hong, Euny. The Birth of Korean Cool: How One Nation is Conquering the World Through Pop Culture.
  • Huat, Beng Chua and Iwabuchi Koichi. East Asian Pop Culture: Analysing the Korean Wave.
  • Hyunjoon Shin, “Have you ever seen the Rain? And who’ll stop the Rain?: the globalizing project of Korean pop (K-pop),” Inter-Asia Cultural Studies, (2009): 507-523.
  • Hye-Kyung Lee, “Cultural policy and the Korean Wave: From national culture to transnational consumerism,” (2013), 185-198.
  • Hyunseon Lee, “The South Korean Blockbuster and a Divided Nation,” International Journal of Korean History, (2016); 259-264.
  • Kenobi, Kimberly. “The 25 Best Films of the South Korean New Wave.” Taste of Cinema. July 24, 2014. http://www.tasteofcinema.com/2014/the-25-best-films-of-the-south-korean-new-wave/
  • Kim, Kyung Hyun and Youngmin Choe. The Korean Popular Culture Reader.
  • Kim, Kyung Hyun. The Remasculinization of Korean Cinema.
  • Kim, Youna. The Korean Wave: Korean Media Go Global.Internationalizing Media Studies. Hoboken: Taylor and Francis, 2013.
  • Kuwahara, Yasue. The Korean Wave: Korean Popular Culture in Global Context.
  • Jeongsuk Joo, “Transnationalization of Korean Popular Culture and the Rise of ‘Pop Nationalism’ in Korea,” The Journal of Popular Culture, (2011): 489-504.
  • Jin, Dal. New Korean Wave: Transnational Cultural Power in the Age of Social Media.
  • Jung, Sun. Korean Masculinities and Transcultural Consumption: Yonsama, Rain, Oldboy, K-Pop Idols.
  • Lee, Sohl. Being Political Popular: South Korean Art at the Intersection of Popular Culture and Democracy, 1980-2010.
  • Marinescu, Valentina and Crystal S. Anderson. The Global Impact of South Korean Popular Culture: Hallyu Unbound.
  • Nye, Joseph and Youna Kim, “Soft power and the Korean Wave,” (2013) pp. 31-42.
  • Russell, Mark James. K-Pop Now! The Korean Music Revolution.
  • Russell, Mark James. Pop Goes Korea: Behind the Revolution in Movies, Music, and Internet Culture.
  • Shim, Doobo, “Hybridity and The Rise of Korean Popular Culture in Asia,” Media, Culture & Society 28, no. 1 (2006): 25-44
  • Shin, Chi-yun and Julian Stringer. New Korean Cinema.
  • Stahler, Kevin. “Comics in North Korea,” Peterson Institute for International Economics, September 29, 2013. https://piie.com/blogs/north-korea-witness-transformation/comics-north-korea
  • “Storming the Big Screen: The Shiri Syndrome.” In Seoul Searching: Culture and Identity in Contemporary Korean Cinema. 55-72.
  • Tudor, Daniel. A Geek in Korea: Discovering Asia’s New Kingdom of Cool.
  • Hip Korea (Discovery Channel, UK, 2009) (6 part series on Youtube): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B6Zr1BAO3ZU

Korean History

Gojoseon/Kojoson (ancient Korean history)

  • Cho, Bup Jong. “Main Points of Contention in Terms of the Studies on Tan’gun and Kojoson.”International Journal of Korean History 8 (August 2005): 53-81.
  • Shim, Jae-Hoon. “A New Understanding of Kija Choson as a Historical Anachronism.”Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies 62:2 (December 2002): 271-305.
  • Shim, Jae-Hoon. “The Dilemma of Choson in Traditional Chinese Texts.”Journal of Asian History 40:1 (2006): 31-48.
  • Song, Ho Jung. “The Formation of Gojoseon and Its Social Characteristics.”The Review of Korean Studies 7:1 (March 2004): 95-114.
  • Yi, Hyunhae. “The Formation and Development of the Samhan.” Early Korea2 (2009): 17-59.
  • Yi, Ki-dong. “The Study of Ancient Korean History and Its Problems.” Korea Journal27:12 (December 1987): 41-49.
  • Yoon, Nae-Hyun. “True Understanding of Old Choson.”Korea Journal 27:12 (December 1987): 23-40.

Three Kingdoms Period

  • Anami, Virginia. “Encounters with Korean Communities of Tang China Depicted in Monk Ennin’s Diary.”Sillasa hakpo 13 (2008:8): 219-239.
  • Best, Jonathan W. “An Overview of Koguryo-Baekje Relations: With a Quick Peek into the Quicksands of Space and Early Korean Standard Time.”Journal of Northeast Asian History 4:1 (June 2007): 187-202.
  • Byington, Mark E. “The Account of the Han in theSanguozhi: An Annotated Translation.”  Early Korea 2 (2009): 125-152.
  • Byington, Mark E. “A Study of Cultural and Political Relations between Puyo and Koguryo.”Journal of Inner and East Asian Studies 2:1 (2004): 144-167.
  • Byington, Mark E. “Control or Conquer?: Koguryo’s Relations with States and Peoples in Manchuria.”Journal of Northeast Asian History 4:1 (June 2007): 83-117.
  • Cheng, Yenkyu.Ancient Korea and the Dawn of Human History on the Pamirs: A Linguistic, Historic and Anthropological Approach. Seoul: Jimoondang, 2007.
  • Cheng, Yenkyu.The New Horizon to Ancient Korean History: Buyeo – Three Kingdoms – Balhae – Goryeo – Joseon Colonies in Japan – The Mental Culture of Ancient Korea. Seoul: Jimoondang, 2009.
  • Choi, Jongtaik. “A Chronological Study of Goguryeo Pottery.” The International Journal of Korean Art and Archaeology2 (2008): 8-41.
  • De Benedittis, Andrea. “A New Perspective on the Analysis of Koguryo Wall Paintings Iconography.” The Journal of Northeast Asian History 8:1 (Summer 2011): 123-145.
  • Gold Crowns of Silla: Treasures from a Brilliant Age. Seoul: The Korea Foundation, 2011.
  • Hong, Wontack.Korea and Japan in East Asian History: A Tripolar Approach to East Asian History. Seoul: Kudara International, 2006.
  • Hwang, In-ho. “Changes in the Silla Capital’s Road and Urban Structure.” International Journal of Korean History 14 (2009): 59-90.
  • Jeon, Dong Jae. “Characteristics and Changes in the Political System during the Three Kingdoms Era.”International Journal of Korean History 8 (August 2005): 129-167.
  • Jeon, Deog-jae. “The Constitution of the Ruling Elite in Middle and Late Silla.” InSociety and State in Middle and Late Silla, ed. Richard D. McBride II. Cambridge, Mass.: Early Korea Project, Korea Institute, Harvard University, 2010.
  • Jeon, Deok-jae. “Characteristics of the Council of Nobles in Silla and Its Transformation.”The Review of Korean Studies 6:2 (December 2003): 233-265.
  • Jeon, Ho-Tae. “Artistic Creation, Borrowing, Adaptation, and Assimilation in Koguryo Tomb Murals of the Fourth to Seventh Century.”Archives of Asian Art56 (2006): 81-104.
  • Jeon, Ho-Tae.The Dreams of the Living and Hopes of the Dead: Goguryeo Tomb Murals. Seoul: Seoul National University Press, 2007.
  • Jeon, Ho-tae.Goguryeo: In Search of Its Culture and History. Seoul: Hollym, 2008.
  • Ju, Bo Don. “Problems Concerning the Basic Historical Documents Related to the Samhan.”Early Korea 2 (2009): 95-122.
  • Jung, Woon Yong. “Trends in Koguryo’s Relationship with Paekche and Silla during the 4th-7th Centuries.”International Journal of Korean History 8 (August 2005): 85-125.
  • Jung, Woonyong. “Aspect of the Relations between Koguryo and Silla.”Journal of Northeast Asian History 4:1 (June 2007): 153-186.
  • Kim, Il-gwon. “Analysis of the Astronomical System of Constellations in Koguryo Tomb Murals.”The Review of Korean Studies 11:2 (June 2008): 5-32.
  • Kim, Jang-hwan, and Lily Xiao Hong Lee. “The Circulation and Study of the Shishuo Xinyu in Korea.”Early Medieval China 12 (2006): 31-67.
  • Kim, Jung-Bae. “Formation of the Ethnic Korean Nation and the Emergence of Its Ancient Kingdom States.” In Korean National Commission for UNESCO, ed.Korean History: Discovery of Its Characteristics and Developments. Elizabeth, NJ: Hollym, 2004.
  • Kim, Kyongt’aek. “A Critical Review of Discussions on the Complex Society in Ancient Korea.”Munhwa sahak 25 (2006:6): 5-27.
  • Kim, Lena. “Goguryeo People Wearing Jougwan in Tang Chinese Art.”The International Journal of Korean Art and Archaeology 2 (2008): 90-111.
  • Kim, Shinwon. “A Study on the Culture of Landscape Architecture during the Three Kingdoms Period and the Great Shilla Kingdom.”Kyonghung taehakkyo nonmunjip 27 (1998:12): 581-591.
  • Kim, Sung-woo. “Changes in the Layouts of Buddhist Temples in Goguryeo circa Fifth Century AD.” The International Journal of Korean Art and Archaeology 2 (2008): 112-124.
  • Kim, Tae-Heui. “Comparative Study on Similar Origin of Korean, Mongolian, Japanese and Chinese and the Ancient Political History of Korean People.” (Tongui taehakkyo)Tongui nonjip 28 (1998:2): 251-274.
  • Kim, Taesik. “The Cultural Characteristics of Korea’s Ancient Kaya Kingdom.”International Journal of Korean History 8 (August 2005): 169-219.
  • Kim, Taesik. “Koguryo and Gaya: Contacts and Consequences.”Journal of Northeast Asian History 4:1 (June 2007): 41-82.
  • Ledyard, Gari. “How the Linguist’s Tail is Wagging the Historian’s Dog: Problems in the Study of Korean Origins.”Korean Studies Forum 5 (Winter-Spring 1978-1979): 80-88.
  • Lee, Hyunsook. “The Medicine of Silla in East Asia.” Papers of the British Association for Korean Studies 13 (2011): 1-16.
  • Lee, Jaehyun. “The Interregional Relations and Developmental Processes of Samhan Culture.” Early Korea 2 (2009): 61-94.
  • Lee, Kidong. “Political and Social Factors in the Fall of Silla.” InSociety and State in Middle and Late Silla, ed. Richard D. McBride II. Cambridge, Mass.: Early Korea Project, Korea Institute, Harvard University, 2010.
  • Lee, Kang-lae. “The Historiographical Status of the History of the Three Kingdoms (Samguksagi).”International Journal of Korean History 2 (2001): 221-251.
  • Lee, Sungshi. “Koguryo Diplomacy Towards the Wa: Foreign Political Strategy and the Situation in East Asia.”Journal of Northeast Asian History 4:1 (June 2007): 119-151.
  • Lee, Young-sik. “Recent Research Trends on the History of Kaya in Korea.”International Journal of Korean History 1 (2000): 1-16.
  • Lim, Kihwan. “The Interstate Order of Ancient Northeast Asia: Focusing on the 4th-7th Centuries.”Journal of Northeast Asian History 4:1 (June 2007): 13-39.
  • McBride, Richard D., II. “Is theSamguk yusa Reliable? Case Studies from Chinese and Korean Sources.” The Journal of Korean Studies 11:1 (Fall 2006): 163-189.
  • McBride, Richard D., II, ed. Society and State in Middle and Late Silla. Cambridge, Mass.: Early Korea Project, Korea Institute, Harvard University, 2010.
  • Moon, Chong Rho. “Achievements and Future Tasks in the Field of Ancient History.”International Journal of Korean History 8 (August 2005): 1-49.
  • Na, Hee La. “Ideology and Religion in Ancient Korea.”Korea Journal 43:4 (Winter 2003): 10-29.
  • Nishitani, Tadashi. “Toward the Study of the History of Koguryo: Koguryo Relics Listed as World Cultural Heritage.”Journal of Inner and East Asian Studies 3:1 (June 2006): 109-124.
  • Noh, Tae-don. “The Worldview of the Goguryeo People as Preserved in Fifth-Century Stone Monument Inscriptions.”Seoul Journal of Korean Studies 17 (2004): 1-43.
  • Pan, Yihong. “Tang and Korea: Expansion and Withdrawal.” InSon of Heaven and Heavenly Qaghan: Sui-Tang China and Its Neighbors. Bellingham, Wash.: Western Washington University, 1997.
  • Park, Ah-rim. “A Comparative Study on the Funerary Paintings from the Northern Dynasties Tombs of China with Koguryo Mural Tombs.”Kukche Chunggukhak yongu 7 (2004:12): 269-294.
  • Park, Ah-Rim. Koguryo Tomb Murals in the East Asian Funerary Art. Seoul: Jimoondang, 2009.
  • Park, Daejae. “War and Ritual in Ancient Korea: From the Bronze Age to the Three Kingdoms Era.” Korea Journal51:1 (Spring 2011): 118-142.
  • Ryu, Song-ok. “The Costume of Ancient Koguryo: Its Relation to Other Regions in Asia.” InProceedings of the Conference on Sino-Korean-Japanese Cultural Relations. Taipei: Pacific Cultural Foundation, 1983.
  • Sasse, Werner. “Trying to Figure Out How Kings Became Kings in Silla.”Cahiers d’Etudes Coreennes7 (2000): 227-244.
  • Song, Kiho. “Ancient Literacy: Comparison and Periodization.”Seoul Journal of Korean Studies 20:2 (December 2007): 149-192.
  • Song, Sun-hee. “The Koguryo Foundation Myth: An Integrated Analysis.”Asian Folklore Studies 33:2 (1974): 37-92.
  • Tanaka, Yoshiyuki. “Kinship in the Three Kingdoms Period of Korea: Especially in Gaya Region.”Interaction and Transformations 1 (2003): 1-27.
  • Wong, Joseph. “Unfought Korean Wars: Prelude to the Korean Wars of the Seventh Century.”Papers on Far Eastern History 22 (September 1980): 123-158.
  • Yi, Hyunhae. “The Formation and Development of the Samhan.” Early Korea2 (2009): 17-59.
  • Yoon, Jinpyo. “An Application of Systems Theory to the Ancient Korean Three Kingdoms Period.”Korea Observer 22:3 (Autumn 1991): 363-386.
  • Yu, Chai-Shin, and Tae Ho Lee.Early Korean Art and Culture: Tomb Mural of Koguryo. Toronto: Society for Korean and Related Studies, 2011.
  • Yu, Young Chul, and In Nam Hwang. “A Study on the Philosophy of the Body and Physical Activity of Hwarang in Silla.”Hanguk rejŏ sŭp’och’ŭ hakhoeji 7 (2003): 107-110.

North-South States Period

  • Cheong, Byungjun. “The Foundation of Balhae by Dae Joyeong and His Group in Yingzhou.”Journal of Northeast Asian History 4:2 (December 2007): 37-59.
  • Hamada, Kosaku. “Transition of Understanding Balhae in Japan.”Journal of Northeast Asian History 4:2 (December 2007): 173-189.
  • Kim, Alexander A. “Ritual and Diplomacy: The 200-Years Crisis in Relation between Parhae and Silla.” Asian Culture and History2:1 (January 2010): 34-40.
  • Kim, Chang Seok. “Parhae’s Maritime Routes to Japan in the Eighth Century.” Seoul Journal of Korean Studies23:1 (June 2010): 1-22.
  • Ku, Nanhee. “Issues on the Exchanges between Balhae and Japan in the 8th Century.”Journal of Northeast Asian History 4:2 (December 2007): 95-117.
  • Lim, Sangsun. “Development of the Balhae Kingdom and Its Succession to Koguryo.”Journal of Northeast Asian History 4:2 (December 2007): 61-94.
  • Northeast Asian History Foundation, ed.A New History of Parhae. Leiden: Brill, 2011.
  • Song, Kiho. “Facts and Premises: On the Old Tombs of Balhae.”Journal of Northeast Asian History 4:2 (December 2007): 13-36.

Koryeo/Goryeo Period

  • Breuker, Remco. “Borrowed Status: Sinophilia in 12th Century Koryo?”Bochumer Jahrbuch zur Ostasienforschung 27 (2003): 9-43.
  • Breuker, Remco E. “The Three in One, the One in Three: The Koryo Three Han as a Pre-modern Nation.”Journal of Inner and East Asian Studies 2:2 (December 2005): 144-167.
  • Breuker, Remco E. “Landscape Out of Time: ‘De-chronicling’ the Landscape in Medieval Korea.”Sungkyun Journal of East Asian Studies 7:2 (October 2007): 69-106.
  • Breuker, Remco. “Forging the Truth: Creative Deception and National Identity in Medieval Korea.”East Asian History 35 (June 2008): 1-73.
  • Breuker, Remco E.Pre-modern States on China’s North-eastern Frontier: The Liao, 916-1125, and the Koryo, 918-1392. London: Routledge, 2009.
  • Breuker, Remco E. Establishing a Pluralist Society in Medieval Korea, 918-1170: History, Ideology, and Identity in the Koryo Dynasty. Leiden: Brill, 2010.
  • Conlan, Thomas.In Little Need of Divine Intervention: Scrolls of the Mongol Invasions of Japan. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell East Asia Series, East Asia Program, 2000.
  • Horlyck, Charlotte. “Meaningful Commodities: Mirrors, Merchandise and Market Policies in the Koryŏ Period.”Kukche Koryohak 12 (2008): 239-257.
  • Kallander, George L. “A Marriage of Convenience: Goryeo-Mongol Relations in the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries.” InGenghis Khan and the Mongol Empire, ed. William W. Fitzhugh, Morris Rossabi, and William Honeychurch. Santa Barbara, Calif.: Perpetua Press, 2009.
  • Kim, K.I. “Cheju Horses and Their Origin.”( Cheju taehakkyo nonggwa taehak tongmul kwahak yonguso) Tongmul kwahak nonch’ong 14 (1999:12): 79-93.
  • Lee, Hai-soon. “Representation of Females in Twelfth-Century Korean Historiography.” In Dorothy Ko, JaHyun Kim Haboush, and Joan R. Piggott, eds.Women and Confucian Cultures in Premodern China, Korea, and Japan. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2003.
  • Lee, Jin-Han. “The Development of Diplomatic Relations and Trade with Ming in the Last Years of the Koryo Dynasty.”International Journal of Korean History 10 (December 2006): 1-23.
  • Lim, Hyongtaek. “Goryeo Literary Intellectuals and Civilization Consciousness: Historical Change in the Fourteenth Century.”Korea Journal 41:3 (Autumn 2001): 30-56.
  • Min, Hyon-ku. “Koryo Politics under the Mongol Control: Dynastic Continuity during the Period of Royal Absense.”International Journal of Korean History 1 (2000): 17-38.
  • Na, Jongwoo. “Relation with Japan in the Era of Koryo.”International Journal of Korean History 10 (December 2006): 71-92.
  • Na, Jongwoo. “Were the Wako Pirate Groups Controlled by Japanese Tribal Clans?” InThe Foreseen and the Unforeseen in Historical Relations between Korea and Japan.  Seoul: Northeast Asian History Foundation, 2009.
  • Robinson, David M. Empire’s Twilight: Northeast Asia under the Mongols. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Asia Center, 2009.
  • Salem, Ellen. “The Landowning Slave: A Korean Phenomenon.” In Korean National Commission for UNESCO, ed.Korean History: Discovery of Its Characteristics and Developments. Elizabeth, N.J.: Hollym, 2004.
  • Shim, Wi-sop. “Trans-Yellow Sea Global Trade during the Middle Ages as an Extension of Maritime Silk Road to Korea.” (Hanguk Oegugŏ Taehakkyo Oegukhak Ch’onghap Yŏngu Sent’ŏ Chungdong Yŏnguso) Chungdong yŏngu25:1 (2006:7): 103-137.
  • Shultz, Edward J.Generals and Scholars: Military Rule in Medieval Korea. Honolulu: University of Hawai’i Press, 2000.
  • Shultz, Edward. “Cultural History.” In Kumja Paik Kim, ed.Goryeo Dynasty: Korea’s Age of Enlightenment, 918 to 1392 . San Francisco: Asian Art Museum, 2003.
  • Yun, Peter. “Foreigners in Korea during the Period of Mongol Interference.” InEmbracing the Other: The Interaction of Korean and Foreign Cultures: Proceedings of the 1st World Congress of Korean Studies, III. Songnam, Republic of Korea: The Academy of Korean Studies, 2002.
  • Zhao, George Qingzhi. “Kongnyo: Korean Tribute Women and Mongol-Koryo Relations during the 13th and 14th Centuries.” Toronto Studies in Central and Inner Asia9 (2008): 95-110.

The Choson/Joseon Period (also known as Yi Dynasty)

  • Alston, Dane. “Emperor and Emissary: The Hongwu Emperor, Kwŏn Kŭn, and the Poetry of Late Fourteenth Century Diplomacy.” Korean Studies32 (2008): 104-147.
  • Baker, Donald L. “Rituals and Resistance in Choson Korea.”Sungkyun Journal of East Asian Studies 7:2 (October 2007): 6-13.
  • Baker, Donald. “Shamans, Catholics, and Chong Yagyong: Tasan’s Defense of the Ritual Hegemony of the Confucian State.” Tasanhak15 (2009): 139-180.
  • Cho, Sung-san. “The Formation and Transformation of the Awareness of a Common Cultural Identity in 19th Century Chosŏn.” International Journal of Korean History16:1 (February 2011): 81-113.
  • Choi, Mihwa. “State Suppression of Buddhism and Royal Patronage of the Ritual of Water and Land in the Early Choson Dynasty.”Seoul Journal of Korean Studies 22:2 (December 2009): 181-214.
  • Chung, Sungil. “Joseon’s Ginseng and Japan’s Silver.” InThe Foreseen and the Unforeseen in Historical Relations between Korea and Japan. Seoul: Northeast Asian History Foundation, 2009.
  • Duncan, John B.The Origins of the Choson Dynasty. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2000.
  • Finch, Michael. “Civilian Life in Chosŏn during the Japanese Invasion of 1592: The ‘Namhaeng illok’ and ‘Imjin illok’ inSwaemirok by Ŏ Hŭimun.” Acta Koreana 12:2 (December 2009): 55-77.
  • Han, Sang-kwon. “Social Problems and the Active Use of Petitions during the Reign of King Chongjo.”Korea Journal 40:4 (Winter 2000): 227-246.
  • Hawley, Samuel. “Haengju Mountain Fortress on the ‘River of Hell.’”Transactions of the Royal Asiatic Society Korea Branch 85 (2010): 29-35.
  • Hejtmanek, Milan. “Sailing off the Map: Voyages to Sambong Island in Fifteenth-Century Korea.”Sungkyun Journal of East Asian Studies 7:1 (April 2007): 33-45.
  • Hellyer, Robert. “Poor but Not Pirates: The Tsushima Domain and Foreign Relations in Early Modern Japan.” InElusive Pirates, Pervasive Smugglers: Violence and Clandestine Trade in the Greater China Seas, ed. Robert J. Antony. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, 2010.
  • Jung, Eunji. “Korean Clothing and the Emperor of Japan in the 1682 Embassy to Japan.” Acta Koreana13:1 (June 2010): 35-51.
  • Kang, Sook Ja. “The Role of King Sejong in Establishing the Confucian Ritual Code.”The Review of Korean Studies 9:3 (September 2006): 71-102.
  • Karlsson, Anders. “Central Power, Local Society, and Rural Unrest in Nineteenth-Century Korea: An Attempt at Comparative Local History.”Sungkyun Journal of East Asian Studies 6:2 (October 2006): 207-238.
  • Karlsson, Anders. “Famine Relief, Social Order, and State Performance in Late Choson Korea.”The Journal of Korean Studies 12:1 (Fall 2007): 113-142.
  • Kim, Jungwon. “Finding Korean Women’s Voices in Legal Archives.” Journal of Women’s History 22:2 (Summer 2010): 149-152.
  • Kim, Marie Song-hak. “‘Comparing the Incomparable’”: Local Custom and Law in Sixteenth-Century Korea and France.”Journal of Early Modern History 12:6 (December 2008): 507-538.
  • Koo, Jeong-Woo. “The Origins of the Public Sphere and Civil Society: Private Academies and Petitions in Korea, 1506-1800.”Social Science History 31:3 (Fall 2007): 381-410.
  • Lee, Chul-sung. “Re-evaluation of the Choson Dynasty’s Trade Relationship with the Ch’ing Dynasty.”International Journal of Korean History 3 (2002): 95-122.
  • Park, Hong-Kyu. “King Taejong as a Statesman: From Power to Authority.”Korea Journal 46:4 (Winter 2006): 192-221.
  • Rawski, Evelyn. “China’s Relations with Korea and Japan during the Ming-Qing Transition.” Transactions of the International Conference of Eastern Studies54 (2009): 47-64.
  • Robinson, Kenneth R. “Centering the King of Choson: Aspects of Korean Maritime Diplomacy, 1392-1592.”The Journal of Asian Studies 59:1 (February 2000): 109-125.
  • Robinson, Kenneth R. “Japanese Presence, Korean Military Bases, and Korean Maps in the Late Fifteenth Century.” Acta Koreana13:1 (June 2010): 7-34.
  • Shin, Yong-Ha.Essays in Korean Social History. Seoul: Jisik-sanop Publications Co., 2003.
  • Sohn, Pokee.Social History of the Early Choson Dynasty: The Functional Aspects of Governmental Structure. Seoul: Jisik-sanup Publications, Co., 2000.
  • Song, Chan-sup. “The Development of the Chinju Peasants’ Rebellion of 1862.”International Journal of Korean History 3 (2002): 123-178.
  • Song, Ki-joong.The Study of Foreign Languages in the Choson Dynasty. Seoul: Jimoondang, 2000.

Mid-1800s to 1945

  • Atkins, E. Taylor. “The Dual Career of `Arirang’: The Korean Resistance Anthem that Became a Japanese Pop Hit.”The Journal of Asian Studies 66:3 (August 2007): 645-687.
  • Atkins, E. Taylor. Primitive Selves: Koreana in the Japanese Colonial Gaze, 1910-1945. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2010.
  • Babicz, Lionel. “The Starting Point of Modern Japanese-Korean Relations: The Letter Incident of 1869.” In Bert Edstrom, ed.Turning Points in Japanese History. London: RoutledgeCurzon, 2002.
  • Babicz, Lionel. “Race, Civilization, and National Security: The Meiji Intellectual Origins of the Annexation of Korea.” (Kokusai Kirisutokyō Daigaku Ajia Bunka Kenkyūjo) Ajia bunka kenkyū36 (2010): 319-329.
  • Brandt, Kim. “Objects of Desire: Japanese Collectors and Colonial Korea.”Positions: east asia cultures critique 8:3 (Winter 2000): 711-746.
  • Caprio, Mark E. “The Japanese Annexation of the Korean Peninsula: A Case of Peripheral Colonial Expansion?”Sophia International Review 24 (2002): 1-15.
  • Caprio, Mark E. “Japanese and American Images of Koreans: A Tale of Two Occupations.” InTrans-Pacific Relations: America, Europe, and Asia in the Twentieth Century, ed. Richard Jensen, Jon Davidann, and Yoneyuki Sugita. Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 2003.
  • Caprio, Mark E.Japanese Assimilation Policies in Colonial Korea, 1910-1945.Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2009.
  • Caprio, Mark. “Marketing Assimilation: The Press and the Formation of the Japanese-Korean Colonial Relationship.” The Journal of Korean Studies 16:1 (Spring 2011): 1-25.
  • Chae, Ou-byung. “The ‘Moment of the Boomerang’ Never Came: Resistance and Collaboration in Colonial Korea.” The Journal of Historical Sociology 23:2 (September 2010): 398-426.
  • Chung, Yong-Hwa. “Confucianism and Human Rights: The Reception of the Concept of People’s Rights during the Enlightenment Period.”Korean Social Science Journal 22:2 (2001): 1-23.
  • Chung, Yong-Hwa. “The Modern Transformation of Korean Identity: Enlightenment and Orientalism.”Korea Journal 46:1 (Spring 2006): 109-138.
  • Chung, Youn-tae. “Refracted Modernity and the Issue of Pro-Japanese Collaborators in Korea.”Korea Journal 42:3 (Autumn 2002): 18-57.
  • Dudden, Alexis.Japan’s Colonization of Korea: Discourse and Power. Honolulu: University of Hawai‘i Press, 2004.
  • Em, Henry. “Between Colonialism and Nationalism: Power and Subjectivity in Korea, 1931-1950.”The Journal of the International Institute 9:1 (Fall 2001)
  • Faison, Elyssa. “Gender and Korean Labour in Wartime Japan.” InGender and Labour in Korea and Japan, ed. Ruth Barraclough and Elyssa Faison. London: Routledge, 2011.
  • Han, Do-Hyun. “Shamanism, Superstition, and the Colonial Government.”The Review of Korean Studies 3:1 (July 2000): 34-54.
  • Han, Jung-Sung N. “Empire of Comic Visions: Japanese Cartoon Journalism and the Pictorial Statements of Korea, 1876-1910.”Japanese Studies 26:3 (2006): 283-302.
  • Hatada, Takashi. “The Rise of Nationalism and Communism in Korea.” In Debra A. Miller, ed.The History of Nations: North Korea. Farmington Hills, MI: Greenhaven Press, 2004.
  • Hwang, Dongyoun. “Beyond Independence: The Korean Anarchist Press in China and Japan in the 1920s and 1930s.”Asian Studies Review 31:1 (March 2007): 3-23.
  • Hwang, Kyung Moon. “Nation, State and the Modern Transformation of Korean Social Structure in the Early Twentieth Century.”History Compass 5:2 (February 2007): 330-346.
  • Jeon, Sang-sook. “The Characteristics of Japanese Colonial Rule in Korea.”The Journal of Northeast Asian History 8:1 (Summer 2011): 39-74.
  • Jeong, Kelly. “New Women, Romance, and Railroads: The Paradox of Colonial Modernity.”Acta Koreana 10:2 (July 2007): 39-72.
  • Jeong, Wonsik. “The Urban Development Politics of Seoul as a Colonial City.”Journal of Urban History 27:2 (January 2001): 158-177.
  • Kal, Hong. “Seoul and the Time in Motion: Urban Form and Political Consciousness.”Inter-Asia Cultural Studies 9:3 (January 2008): 359-374.
  • Kang, Hildi.Under the Black Umbrella: Voices from Colonial Korea, 1910-1945.Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2001.
  • Kim, Janice.To Live to Work: Factory Women in Colonial Korea, 1910-1945.Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 2009.
  • Kim, Keongil. “Socialism, the National Question, and East Asia in Colonial Korea: 1937-1945.”Seoul Journal of Korean Studies 23:1 (June 2010): 95-116.
  • Kim, Moo-yong. “National Memory and Identity of the Working Class in Korea (1910-1950).”International Journal of Korean History 1 (2000): 63-90.
  • Matsuda, Toshihiko. Governance and Policing of Colonial Korea: 1904-1919. Kyoto: The International Research Center for Japanese Studies, 2011.
  • Mikanagi, Yumiko. “Women, the State, and War: Understanding Issue of the ‘Comfort Women.’” (Kokusai kirisutokyo daigaku)Shakai kagaku jaanaru 47 (2001:9): 45-58; 48 (2002:3): 37-54.
  • Min, Pyong Gap. “Korean ‘Comfort Women’: The Intersection of Colonial Power, Gender, and Class.” Gender & Society 17:6 (December 2003): 938-957.
  • Moriyama, Shigenori. “Japan’s Colonization of Korea and Urban Change: Aspects of the Control of Cities.”Memoirs of the Research Department of the Toyo Bunko 60 (2002): 39-62.
  • Nakajima, Michio. “Shinto Deities that Crossed the Sea: Japan’s ‘Overseas Shrines,’ 1868 to 1945.” Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 37:1 (2010): 21-46.
  • Narayan, Hriday. “Aspects of Colonialism in Asia: A Comparative Study of the Japanese in Korea (1910-1945) and the British in India (1757-1947).”Hanguk ch’orhak nonjip 15 (2004:9): 159-204.
  • Paine, S.C.M.The Sino-Japanese War of 1894–1895: Perceptions, Power and Primacy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002.
  • Park, Kyeyoung. “The Unspeakable Experiences of Korean Women under Japanese Rule.”Whittier Law Review 21:3 (2000): 567-619.
  • Park, Young. Korea and the Imperialists: In Search of a National Identity.  Bloomington, IN: AuthorHouse, 2009.
  • Shin, Dongwon. “Hygiene, Medicine and Modernity in Korea, 1876-1910.”East Asian Science, Technology and Society (2009):
  • Soh, Chunghee Sarah. “Military Prostitution and Women’s Sexual Labour in Japan and Korea.” InGender and Labour in Korea and Japan, ed. Ruth Barraclough and Elyssa Faison. London: Routledge, 2011.
  • Schellstede, Sangmie Choi, ed.Comfort Women Speak: Testimony by Sex Slaves of the Japanese Military. New York: Holmes and Meier, 2000.
  • Schmid, Andre.Korea between Empires. New York: Columbia University Press, 2002.
  • Shin, Jiweon. “Social Construction of Idealized Images of Women in Colonial Korea: The ‘New Woman’ versus ‘Motherhood.’” In Tamara L. Hunt and Micheline R. Lessard, eds.Women and the Colonial Gaze. New York: New York University Press, 2002.
  • Yoshimi, Yoshiaki.Comfort Women: Sexual Slavery in the Japanese Military during World War II. New York: Columbia University Press, 2000.

Post-1945

  • Armstrong, Charles K. “The Cultural Cold War in Korea, 1945-1950.”The Journal of Asian Studies 62:1 (February 2003): 71-99.
  • Armstrong, Charles K. “ America’s Korea, Korea’s Vietnam.”Critical Asian Studies 33:4 (December 2001): 527-540.
  • Brazinsky, Gregg A.Negotiating Nation Building: Koreans, Americans and the Making of Modern South Korea. Charlotte, N.C.: University of North Carolina Press, 2007.
  • Bruwer, A. “The United States and Biological Warfare: Secrets from the Early Cold War and Korea.”Medicine Conflict and Survival 17:4 (October-November-December 2001): 355-368.
  • Cha, Victor D. “‘Rhee-straint’: The Origins of the U.S.-ROK Alliance.” International Journal of Korean Studies 15:1 (Spring-Summer 2011): 1-15.
  • Chay, Jongsuk.Unequal Partners in Peace and War: The Republic of Korea and the United States, 1948-1953. Westport, CT: Praeger, 2002.
  • Chung, Henry.Korea and the United States through War and Peace, 1943-1960. Seoul: Yonsei University Press, 2000.
  • Cumings, Bruce. “Liberation and Reconciliation in Korea.” In Bonnie B.C. Oh, ed.Korea under the American Military Government, 1945-1948. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood, 2002.
  • DiMoia, John. “Atoms for Sale?: Cold War Institution-Building and the South Korean Atomic Energy Project, 1945-1965.”Technology and Culture 51:3 (July 2010): 589-618.
  • Eberstadt, Nicholas. Policy and Economic Performance in Divided Korea during the Cold War Era: 1945-91. Washington, D.C.: AEI Press, 2010.
  • Han, Woo-Keun. “The Division of Korea.” In Debra A. Miller, ed.The History of Nations: North Korea. Farmington Hills, MI: Greenhaven Press, 2004.
  • Jung, Yong-duck. “The Institutional Change and Continuity of the Korean State Administration, 1948-2010.” Korean Social Science Journal37:2 (December 2010): 131-175.
  • Kang, David. “Cut from the Same Cloth: Bureaucracies and Rulers in South Korea, 1948-1979.” In Chang Yun-shik and Stephen Hugh Lee, eds.Transformations in Twentieth Century Korea. London: Routledge, 2006.
  • Kil, Soong Hoom. “Development of Korean Politics: A Historical Profile.” In Soong Hoom Kil and Chung-in Moon, eds.Understanding Korean Politics: An Introduction. Albany, N.Y.: State University of New York Press, 2001.
  • Kim, Choong Nam. “State and Nation Building in South Korea: A Comparative Historical Perspective.” The Review of Korean Studies 12:1 (March 2009): 121-150.
  • Kim, Dong-Won. “Imaginary Savior: The Image of the Nuclear Bomb in Korea, 1945-1960.” Historia Scientiarum 19:2 (December 2009): 105-118.
  • Kim, Hyun Sun. “Life and Work of Korean War Widows during the 1950s.” The Review of Korean Studies 12:4 (December 2009): 87-109.
  • Kim, Keong-Il. “Modernity and Tradition in Everyday Life of the 1950s.” SeoulJournal of Korean Studies 14 (2001): 263-297.
  • Kim, Kyung Ju.The Development of Modern South Korea: State Formation, Capitalist Development and National Identity. London: Routledge, 2009.
  • Lee, Eun Deug. “Effect of the Korean War upon the Unification Policies, 1953-1960.”KNDU Review: Journal of National Security Affairs 8:1 (2003:6): 135-159.
  • Lee, Jongsoo James.The Partition of Korea after World War II: A Global History. Hampshire, England: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007.
  • Lee, Myung-sik.The History of the Democratization Movement in Korea, second edition.  Seoul: Minjuhwa Undong Kinyŏm Saŏphoe, 2010.
  • Lee, Na Young. “The Construction of Military Prostitution in South Korea during the U.S. Military Rule, 1945-1948.”Feminist Studies 33:3 (Fall 2007): 453-481.
  • Murdoch, William Armour.Republic of Korea, 1957-1959: The Challenge to the People after Occupation and War. Bloomington, IN: AuthorHouse, 2007.
  • Oh, Bonnie B.C., ed.Korea under the American Military Government, 1945-1948. Westport, CT: Greenwood, 2002.
  • Park, Myung-lim. “The Internalization of the Cold War in Korea: Entangling the Domestic Politics with the Global Cold War in 1946.”International Journal of Korean History 2 (2001): 309-350.
  • Rhee, Jooyeon. “Arirang, and the Making of a National Narrative in South and North Korea.”Journal of Japanese and Korean Cinema 1:1 (May 2009): 27-43.
  • Shin, Bok-ryong.The Politics of Separation of the Korean Peninsula, 1943-1953. Seoul: Jimoondang, 2008.