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| Revolutionaries In Deed: Missionaries in the Transformation of Modern Korea |
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To celebrate the publication of the exhibition catalog for Missionary Photography in Korea: Encountering the West Through Christianity—the largest ever show of Korean missionary photographs in the U.S.—Donald N. Clark, professor of history at Trinity University and the editor of the catalog, will present photos taken during a time of revolutionary change in Korea and discuss how those changes are still very much a part of the Korean cultural landscape today.
Copies of the 184-page hardcover catalog, Missionary Photography in Korea: Encountering the West Through Christianity, are available for purchase here. Revolutionaries In Deed: Missionaries in the Transformation of Modern Korea
About the Speaker Donald N. Clark teaches courses on China, Japan, Korea, and the history of American foreign relations. He also serves as director of Trinity's International Studies Program. The son of missionaries, a Peace Corps volunteer, a Social Science Research Council fellow, and a Fulbright scholar, his research focuses on Korea, where he has spent much of his life. Clark earned his B.A. from Whitworth College, his M.A. and Ph.D. from Harvard University. A short version of his doctoral dissertation is featured in the Cambridge History of China. He is the author of Culture and Customs of Korea, and Living Dangerously in Korea: The Western Experience, 1900-1950, the co-author of two books on the history of Seoul, and the editor of several volumes on Korea including one on the 1980 democracy uprising in Kwangju.
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Donald N. Clark

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