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Sourcebook of Korean Civilization: Volume One: From Early Times to the 16th Century

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This anthology is the most ambitious, comprehensive, and authoritative English-language sourcebook of Korean civilization ever assembled. Encompassing social intellectual, religious, and literary traditions from ancient times through World War II, this collection reveals the grand corpus of thought, beliefs, and customs unique to the Korean people.

Volume I features three major periods of Korean history: the Three Kingdoms and Unified Silla (57 B.C.-935), Koryo (918-1392), and Early Choson (1392-1600). Each section begins with a broad historical introduction to provide context and perspective, and contains representative writings from the era, with commentary, background, and analysis.

750 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 5, 1992

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About the author

Peter H. Lee

37 books9 followers
Peter H. Lee (1929-) was born in Seoul, Korea. He received his B.A. from the College of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minnesota, and his M.A. from Yale in 1953. Lee went on to study various languages and comparative literatures at universities in Switzerland, Italy, England and Munich, Germany, where he earned his Ph.D. from Ludwig-Maximilian University in 1958. After holding positions at Columbia, Hawaii, and UC Berkeley, Lee came to UCLA in 1987 to begin his distinguished teaching career in the Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures as a professor of Korean and comparative literature. Professor Lee is an academic pioneer, credited with single-handedly developing the field of Korean literature, especially in a comparative context, in the West. He is the author of 16 books and numerous articles.

(from http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:...)

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Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for Joseph.
226 reviews52 followers
June 4, 2018
Okay, so I'm doing books I love. This is a scholarly tome. It's a continuation of the great "Sources" books done by Ted DeBary (Chinese, Indian and Japanese Tradition). I am prejudiced because I love East Asian Studies, I spent a fair amount of time in Korea and my wife, now passed was born in Korea. I was so happy when this book was published. Finally, source documents laying out the rich, diverse tradition of Korean Intellectual history could be read in English. Finally, I could read about the great Confucian scholars whose images grace Korean currency. Here it was Yi Hwang (T'oegye) and Yi I (Yulgok, the two greatest philosophers of Chosun ... here was the great i-ki (principle) vs (material force). The debate raged in the 1500s. Hmmm, a rich philosophical debate in the 1500s??? ... hmm, what was going on in Europe then? Nothing like this. The book begins with the foundation myth (Tangun) covers the Three Kingdoms period, the rise of governmental institutions, civil service, the rise of Buddhism and early poetry. From Silla it goes to Koryo and Confucianism. The book finishes in the Early Chosun period (16th century). This book is for those who have a real interest in Korean intellectual history and the roots of Korean culture. It's not really light reading, but if you are into this sort of thing it's for you.
Profile Image for Carley Rhymes.
3 reviews
January 31, 2023
Interesting, and very informative. My only complaint is not one that could have been prevented given the nature of Hangul- the translation made for the readings of some of the stories slightly difficult to follow. Genuinely think this should be on everyones reading list for the year.
Profile Image for Patrick.
489 reviews
November 18, 2024
An excellent learning resource, filled with dozens of primary sources from Korean history up through the Chosun dynasty.
Profile Image for Maria.
642 reviews32 followers
November 1, 2015
Reading this book gave me a broad idea of what Korean society (against the background of my basic knowledge about Korea's history) may have looked like. The book nicely combines translated documents, letters, scriptures, chapters, etc., with explanatory texts and background knowledge. It is also quite pleasant to read.

What I disliked about the book was its amount on Buddhist and Confucian scripture / teachings. About half of the volume (as far as I remember) deals with the Buddhist or Confucian thought. I am not a Buddhist / Confucianist, so I have close to no knowledge. Eventhough the information is so extensive, it is also quite dense and does not elaborate enough for me to understand any of it. Truth be told, if an entire faith was so simply explanable in one book, it would not be able to mean so much to so many people for such a long time ;) So I give 4 stars on enjoyment.
Profile Image for P Chulhi.
22 reviews4 followers
September 21, 2010
This book is a collection of primary sources accompanied by some good commentary that give clues to the development of Korean civil society from the Three Kingdoms period up to the early Chosun dynasty. This book avoids the modern nationalistic rhetoric that most East Asian histories suffer. I think its important to note that Peter H. Lee, a Korean, was also a lead editor (it says it right on the cover, I'm not sure why goodreads hasn't got it right).
17 reviews
June 17, 2010
Primary sources from Korean history. Will be reading for awhile...
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews

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