SKAS Book Review 2
(Originally published in IEKAS, 04-34, October 1, 2004)
Korean-Americans: Past, Present, and Future
Edited by Dr. Ilpyong Kim
Professor Emeritus of Political Science
University of Connecticut
An Editor of SKAS
An OKSPN member
Published by Hollym International (www.hollym.com)
August, 2004
ISBN: 1-56591-121-0
299pp, softcover, $24.50
Reviewed by Moo-Young Han
Editor-in-Chief, SKAS
Last year, 2003, marked the first centennial of
Korean Immigration to the United States and all across the land,
Korean communities celebrated this historical
passage of time. Scores of commemorative activities were observed
from coast to coast. One such commemorative
project was the book project titled Korean-Americans: Past, Present,
and Future, and Dr. Ilpyong Kim of the University of
Connecticut was appointed to lead the project. This book is
the culmination of that effort, edited by Professor
Ilpyong Kim and contains essays from 14 contributors including the
editor himself.
The Korean immigration to the United States over the
past 100 years can be roughly divided into 4 distinct phases:
1. 1903 - 1924: Plantation laborers to Hawaii. This was halted in 1924 by the Oriental Exclusion Act.
2. 1924 - 1945: The exclusion act exempted students and some 1,000 Korean students came to American for
education
and professional training. They became the leaders of the
independence movement while
Korea was under the Japanese colonial rule.
3. 1950 - 1970: After the Korean War, a large number Koreans arrived at the American shores. They consisted
of
three major groups - war brides, adoptees and a flood of college
students.
War
brides were - and continue to this day - mostly located close to
military bases and they are somewhat
apart from the rest of the Korean-American communities.
Adoptees also tend to be somewhat apart from the mainstream
Korean-American communities, but they are
very
active among themselves. They have networks of several regional,
national and world-wide organizations
and support
groups. Many adoptees achieved spectacular success in the
American mainstream.
College
students, so many of them, attaining professional pinnacles - PhDs,
medical doctors, lawyers,
professors, journalists, media professionals, scientists, engineers,
life science researchers, and so on. This is
the group who not only occupy leadership roles in the larger Korean
communities but also provided - many
returned to Korea - the backbone to the development of modern Korean
science, technology, and economy,
the "miracle on the Han river."
4. 1970 - present: The repeal of the national origin quota system by the 1965 Immigration Reform Act opened
the floodgate and the massive Korean immigration got under way.
Koreans came by tens of thousands, followed
by their families.
These are the mainstream Korean-Americana now, the "Koreatowns"
of LA and other
Southern California
areas, the greater New-York-New Jersey area, the greater
Washington-Maryland-
Northern Virginia area, followed by Chicago, Atlanta, and practically
all major metropolitan areas of this land.
In Part I (The Past) of the book, the history of the
first and second phases are superbly summarized and reviewed by
three papers:
PART I. THE PAST
1. A Century of Korean Immigration to the United States: 1903-2003
Ilpyong J. Kim, University of Connecticut
2. History of the Korean Church: A Case Study of Christ United Methodist Church
Yong-Ho Choe, University of Hawaii
3. The Korean Independence Movement in the United States: Syngman Rhee, Ahn Chang-Ho and Pak Yong-Man
Han-Kyo Kim, University of Cincinnati
All three papers contain rich chronicle of
historical facts and data and represent invaluable contribution to the
history
of Korean Immigration in this period of 1903 - 1945.
There are several other books for this period. One book that
chronicles the oral history of the early immigrants
to the Hawaiian islands is "Passages to paradise: Early Korean
immigrant narratives from Hawai'i" by Daisy Chun Rhodes, Academia Koreana (1998).
It is in Parts II (The Present) and III (The Future)
the novel and unique approach of this book comes into focus.
Deviating from the more or less 'standard' approach
of enlisting essays from older and more established experts,
Dr. Kim turned to the present and the future, literally.
For the part dealing with the present, Dr. Kim
enlisted 7 essays from younger generation authors and the content of
their essays reflect this very refreshingly new
perspective. And for the part dealing with the future, Dr. Kim literally
aimed to the future, essays from those who are
currently enrolled at colleges and universities. It was a stroke
of
genius that makes this book uniquely insightful.
The titles and subjects of these two parts tell the story:
PART II. THE PRESENT
4. The Dawn of a New Generation: The
Historical Evolution of Inter-Generational Conflict and
Cooperation in
Korean-American Organizational Politics
Angie Y. Chung, State University of New York at Albany
5. In the Name of the Family: Gender and Immigrant Small Business Ownership
Eunju Lee, State University of New York at Albany
6. Korean Immigrant Women's Work in the Nail Salon Industry: Gender, Race and Class in the Service Sector
Miliann Kang, University of Massachusetts at Amherst
7. Korean Adoptees Role in the United States
Eleana Kim, New York University
8. The Coming of Age of Korean Adoptees: Ethnic Identity Development and Psychological Adjustment
Richard M. Lee, University of Minnesota
9. Independent and Interdependent Self-Construals of Korean and Korean Americans: The Effect of Gender
and the Level of Acculturation
Yoon Joh, University of Connecticut at Storrs
10. The Role of Religious Congregations in Formation
of the Korean Community of the Washington, DC Area
Okyun Kwon, City University of New York
PART III. THE FUTURE
11. Confucian Ideals and American Values
Brian Lee, Yale University
12. Acculturation without Assimilation
Jane Euna Kim, Boston University
13. CollegeVoter.Org
Sean Oh, Dartmouth College
14. Korean-American Youth: Almost There, Yet So Far Away
Howard Han, Yale University
This book provides an in-depth thinking of the
younger and future generation of Korean-Americans and it is a must
read for all of us in the Korean-American community.
The book is available from the Hollym International Publishers
located in New Jersey. A link to Hollym is posted in the SKAS e-library at the SKAS website (www.skas.org).
Extensive analyses of the Korean-American demographics, as well as many social, economic and religious data,
based on the census 2000 have been carried out by Professors Eui-Young Yu and Timothy C. Lim at the Center
of Korean-American and Korean Studies at the
California State University at Los Angeles. Over 100 tables are
prepared, many in downloadable PDF format, and they are linked in the Links section of the SKAS website.
The triad - this book, the book by Ms. Daisy Chun Rhodes, and the census 2000 Korean-American demographic
tables - forms a comprehensive summary of the first 100
years of Korean immigration to the United States.