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March First Movement

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Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1988) 47 (2): 385–387.
Published: 01 May 1988
... of these and related questions. JAMES E. KETELAAR University of North Florida KOREA Man Sei! The Making ofa Korean American. By PETER H Y U N . Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1986. xiv, 186 pp. $17.50. Korea Under Colonialism: The March First Movement and Anglo-Japanese Relations. By DAE-YEOL K U . Seoul: Seoul...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2019) 78 (2): 399–408.
Published: 01 May 2019
... protesters on March 1, 1919, shouting “Mansei!” (“Long live Korean independence!”), which became the first nationwide protest movement against Japanese rule. After being convicted of sedition, Yu was sent to Seodaemun Prison in Seoul, where she demanded the release of other prisoners and continued to express...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2023) 29 (1): 35–42.
Published: 01 November 1969
... influenced by the teachings of Kʻang Yu-wei. By March it had broadened the scope of institutional change and had widely popularized Kʻang's ideas. Members of the elite, who at first had supported reform, became alarmed as the movement became more radical. They disagreed sharply with the Kʻang Yu-wei group...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1990) 49 (4): 787–806.
Published: 01 November 1990
... March First Independence Movement, and publishing numerous articles on Korean culture. He was also a leading Korean historian at a time when Japanese scholars monopolized Korean studies. Copyright © The Association for Asian Studies, Inc. 1990 1990 List of References Abbreviation YCNC...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1970) 29 (2): 395–412.
Published: 01 February 1970
...Tien-wei Wu Abstract The Kiangsi Soviet period, the second phase of the Chinese Communist movement, began with the establishment of the Chingkangshan base by Mao Tse-tung in late 1927 and ended in the “Long March” in October 1934. The study of this important period had long remained sketchy because...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1988) 47 (2): 387–389.
Published: 01 May 1988
...Gerard F. Kennedy BOOK REVIEWS KOREA 387 pacific tactics" (p. 294). He correctly points out that the intentions of the religious leaders who brought about the movement were different from the actual course of the violent "uprising" that followed. However, his thesis that the March First Movement...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1988) 47 (3): 663–664.
Published: 01 August 1988
... in the "Conspiracy Case" of 1911 and then during the March First independence movement in 1919, were partly successful but embarrassed the Japanese in the court of world opinion. Wi Jo Kang credits Christians with a considerable role in the independence movement and details the liberalization of restraints...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2012) 71 (2): 399–422.
Published: 01 May 2012
... ). The NDSC systematized student participation in commemorations of the March First Movement and the Kwangju Students Movement, as the two events became regular dates on the NDSC calendar in the early 1950s. After Korean War combat had reached a stalemate in the summer of 1951, memorial ceremonies for March...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2014) 73 (3): 820–822.
Published: 01 August 2014
..., often with even greater antagonism. At the same time, Uchida also emphasizes the degree to which both settlers and government officials engaged with (or were engaged by) the Koreans among whom they lived. She marks the March First movement and its aftermath as the pivotal moment that fundamentally...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1988) 47 (2): 383–385.
Published: 01 May 1988
... . Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1986. xiv, 186 pp. $17.50. Korea Under Colonialism: The March First Movement and Anglo-Japanese Relations. By DAE-YEOL K U . Seoul: Seoul Computer Press, 1985. xviii, 340 pp. $20.00. As the seventieth anniversary of the March First (Samil) Movement of 1919 approaches...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1988) 47 (3): 664–665.
Published: 01 August 1988
... with Ch'ondogyo's role in the March First movement. There is not enough on the suppression of Ch'ondogyo outside the March First movement, even though Kang asserts that it was the most persecuted of Korean religious movements. The chapter thus leaves the reader with a certain frustration. The interaction...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1974) 34 (1): 236–237.
Published: 01 November 1974
... and Prof. Frank Baldwin, the author of "Missionaries and the March First Movement." Chee's article and footnotes use a number of Korean materials and "literary magazines" including the Kaebyo\, the Choson Munha\, and the Sin Tonga (pp. 233 and 246-48). Baldwin's sources include background papers prepared...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2019) 78 (2): 255–256.
Published: 01 May 2019
..., the March First Movement in Korea, and the satyagrahas and mass politics in India can no longer be studied only within national frameworks, as scholars over the past few decades have provided new insights into the global networks of intellectuals, organizations, trade, and politics that connected...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2011) 70 (1): 262–264.
Published: 01 February 2011
...) was a student, along with L. George Paik, at the Presbyterian-run Park College in Missouri when the March First Movement broke out in Korea in 1919. Having been converted to Christianity in Korea by the Reverend Samuel Moffett, Charr came to the United States in 1905 along with 7,500 others in the first wave...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2013) 72 (2): 484–486.
Published: 01 May 2013
... America, Manchuria, and Siberia (pp. 41–42). This early expression of diasporic community began to unravel within a mere decade as the March First movement and the Korean Provisional Government (KPG) emerged in 1919—ironically the very moment that modern nationalism appeared to be forging a united...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1981) 40 (3): 503–523.
Published: 01 May 1981
... The March First Movement of 1919, according to North Korean historians, was the last people's struggle undertaken under the leadership of the bourgeois nationalists. In this struggle against "the barbaric rule of the Japanese imperialists," the bourgeois nationalists revealed the weaknesses inherent...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1964) 23 (3): 480–481.
Published: 01 May 1964
... and consequences of the March First movement of 1919; the Korean Provisional Government and the nationalist movement in exile with an especially clear explanation of complex relationships in China from 1919 to 1945; and the domestic Korean responses to Japanese military, cultural, and assimilative policies prior...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (1964) 23 (3): 479–480.
Published: 01 May 1964
...-political characteristics: the Tonghak rebellion of 1894-95; t n e political impact of the first Sino-Japanese War, the failure of the Independence Club, and the collapse of Korea under Russian-oriented ministers before 1905; the antecedents and consequences of the March First movement of 1919; the Korean...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2018) 77 (2): 544–546.
Published: 01 May 2018
... vanguard scheme that toppled Rhee was in fact an “invented tradition of youth protest” (p. 10), a hagiographic reworking of various colonial-era memories and discourses, including those surrounding the March First Movement of 1919 and the Kwangju Students’ Movement of 1929, as well as a reconfiguring...
Journal Article
Journal of Asian Studies (2021) 80 (1): 243–246.
Published: 01 February 2021
... of what it meant to be Korean were contested among Yanbian Koreans along the lines of reformism versus conservatism. Such debates alimented Korean nationalist movements that developed within educational institutions in Yanbian/Kantō. Song suggests that the March First Movement (1919), a turning point...