From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Sunday, February 13, 2011 4:08 AM
Subject: H-ASIA: Professor JeHyun Kim Haboush
> H-ASIA
> February 12, 2011
>
> Professor JaHyun Kim Haboush
>
> (courtesy of Kristin Stapleton)
> *****************************************************************
> Ed. note: I have drawn together material from two sites at Columbia
> University concerning the passing of Professor JaHyun Kim Haboush, a 
> prolific and influential scholar of Korean civilization.  I hope that
> we may receive a more personal obituary note from one of her students or 
> colleagues, but in the interim, I hope this will provide suitable
> notice of this sad news.                                FFC
> -------------------------------------------------------------------
> From: Frank Conlon
>
> The webpage of the Columbia University Department of East Asian Languages 
> and Cultures contains the following noteL
>
> January 31st, 2011
>
> It is with great sadness that we announce the passing of JaHyun Kim 
> Haboush, King Sejong Professor of Korean Studies, on January 30th, 2011, 
> after a valiant struggle against breast cancer. A valued member of the 
> EALAC faculty and leading figure in Korean studies, Professor Haboush?s 
> loss is irretrievably sad for all of us personally and for the department.
>
> Information regarding the memorial service will follow when available.
> Sympathy cards may be sent to her husband, Bill Haboush, at the following
> address:
>
> Bill Haboush
> 315 West 70th Street, Apt. 9B
> New York, NY 10023
>
> [modified from Columbia University EALAC Department Website):
>
> Jahyun Kim Haboush, King Sejong Professor of Korean Studies (EALAC), was a 
> cultural historian of pre- and early modern Korea , particularly from 16th 
> to 19th centuries. She was also interested in and teaches literature. 
> Professor Haboush received her MA from the University of Michigan (1970) 
> and Ph.D. from Columbia (1978). Her current areas of interest include 
> political culture, pre-modern nationalism, diglossia, language and 
> ideology, genre, gender, and historiography. Her publications include: A 
> Heritage of Kings: One Mans Monarchy in the Confucian World (1988); The 
> Confucian Kingship in Korea: Yngjo and the Politics of Sagacity (2001); 
> and The Memoirs of Lady Hyegyng: The Autobiographical Writings of a Crown 
> Princess of Eighteenth-Century Korea (1996), for which she won the Korean 
> Arts and Culture Foundations Grand Prize in Translation and Criticism. She 
> also co-edited: The Rise of Neo-Confucianism in Korea (1985); Culture and 
> the State in Late Chosn Korea (1999); and Women in Pre-Modern Confucian 
> Cultures in China , Korea , and Japan (2003).
>
> From Columbia Univ esity website
>
> <http://www.columbiaspectator.com/2011/02/07/
>          korean-professor-haboush-remembered-love-new-york-culture>
>
> Korean professor Haboush remembered for love of New York culture Professor 
> JaHyun Kim Haboush died on Jan. 30 after a battle with breast cancer.
> By Karla Jimenez
>
> Published February 7, 2011
>
> A fan of Korean pansori ballad singing and a lover of New York City, 
> Professor JaHyun Kim Haboush was remembered by colleagues and friends last 
> week as an outstanding Korean scholar and a dedicated Columbian.
>
> Haboush, King Sejong professor of Korean studies, died on Jan. 30 after a 
> battle with breast cancer. She is survived by her husband, Bill Haboush.
>
> Professor JaHyun Kim Haboush was elegant in every respect, from personal 
> style to matters of intellect and expression, adjunct professor of 
> anthropology Laurel Kendall, who had known Haboush since they were both 
> graduate students, said in an email.
>
> Haboush, a member of the East Asian Languages and Cultures faculty, 
> specialized in Koreas cultural history from the 16th to 19th centuries. 
> She received her M.A. from the University of Michigan in 1970 and her 
> Ph.D. from Columbia in 1978, going on to teach at Rutgers University and 
> the University of Illinois before her return to Columbia as a professor in 
> 2000.
>
> She came to Columbia and really brought great energy and prominence to the 
> Korean program, said associate professor of Korean studies Charles 
> Armstrong, who holds Haboushs former position.
>
> Haboush had published numerous books and was still working on new 
> material, all while teaching a full course load.
>
> She passed away at the peak of her career, at the peak of her 
> productivity, Armstrong said. She was a very valuable colleague and one of 
> the leading scholars on Korean studies in the nation and the world.
>
> Jisoo Kim, a professor at George Washington University and Haboush's 
> former student, remembered that she had an interesting method of getting 
> her students to think more deeply during seminar discussions.
>
> When her students would say something, she would pull her face and make a 
> frown or face. If she did that it meant we said something wrong or dumb 
> and we had to reshape our thoughts, Kim said, explaining that it was 
> Haboush's way of getting her students to make compelling arguments.
>
> According to colleagues, Haboush brought an original curiosity to her 
> field--one that extended beyond the academic realm.
>
> She had a deep love of Korea, reflected not only in her work but in her 
> exquisite taste in Korean art and her enthusiasm for pansori ballad 
> singing, Kendall said, recalling a performance by the singer Chan Park at 
> a party in Haboushs apartment.
>
> Kendall also remembered Haboushs knowledge of the city, calling her the 
> most thoroughly cultured New Yorker that I have ever known.
>
> Chun-fang Yu, Sheng Yen Professor of Chinese Buddhism, worked with Haboush 
> on several projects and said that she was passionate about New York's 
> theater, fashion, and music.
>
> We spent much time going to the opera, movies, and explored the cultural 
> riches of New York on weekends and during vacations, Yu said in an email.
>
> Kendall added that Haboush was known for working well with colleagues.
>
> I was her junior and always felt in awe of her but also felt that she was 
> cheering me on, Kendall said. She was a good friend with a warm and rich 
> sense of humor.
>
> The Department mourns her deeply, Haboushs EALAC faculty listing now 
> reads.
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Some works by the late JaHyun Kim Haboush:
>
>   Lee, Soyoung, 1971-
>   Art of the Korean Renaissance, 1400-1600 / Soyoung Lee ; with
>          essays by JaHyun Kim Haboush, Sunpyo Hong, and Chin-Sung Chang.
>   New York : Metropolitan Museum of Art ; New Haven : Yale  University
>          Press, c2009.
>   Published in conjunction with an exhibition on view at the Metropolitan
>          Museum of Art, New York, Mar. 17-June 21, 2009.
>   Creating a society of civil culture : the early Joseon, 1392-1592
>         / JaHyun Kim Haboush -- Art and patronage in the early Joseon /
>           Soyoung Lee -- Peace under heaven : Confucianism and painting
>           in early Joseon Korea / Sunpyo Hong and Chin-Sung Chang --
>           Checklist of objects in the exhibition / Soyoung Lee.
> ISBN      9781588393104 (Metropolitan Museum of Art (hc))
> ISBN      1588393100 (Metropolitan Museum of Art (hc))
> ISBN      9780300148916 (Yale University Press (hc))
> ISBN      0300148917 (Yale University Press (hc))
>
>   Culture and the state in late Choson Korea / JaHyun Kim Haboush &
>       Martina Deuchler, editors.
>   Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard University Asia Center, 1999.
>   Harvard East Asian monographs ; 182.
>   Harvard-Hallym series on Korean studies.
>
>   Epistolary Korea : letters in the communicative space of the
>        Choson, 1392-1910 / edited by JaHyun Kim Haboush.
>   New York : Columbia University Press, c2009.
> ISBN         9780231148023 (cloth : alk. paper)
> ISBN         023114802X (cloth : alk. paper)
> ISBN         9780231148030 (pbk.)
> ISBN         0231148038 (pbk.)
> ISBN         9780231519595 (electronic)
>
>   Hyegyonggung Hong Ssi, 1735-1815.
>   The memoirs of Lady Hyegyong : the autobiographical writings of a Crown
>       Princess of eighteenth-century Korea /
>       translated with an introduction and annotations by JaHyun Kim 
> Haboush.
>   Berkeley : University of California Press, c1996.
> ISBN         0520200543 (alk. paper)
> ISBN         0520200551 (pbk. : alk. paper)
>
>   Haboush, JaHyun Kim.
>   The Confucian kingship in Korea : Yongjo and the politics of
>                sagacity / JaHyun Kim Haboush.
>   New York : Columbia University Press, c2001.
>   Originally published as: A heritage of kings.
> ISBN         0231066570 (paper)
> ISBN         0231066562 (cloth)
>
>   Haboush, JaHyun Kim.
>    A heritage of kings : one man's monarchy in the Confucian world /
>    New York : Columbia University Press, 1988.
> ISBN         0231066562 (alk. paper)
>
>   The Rise of Neo-Confucianism in Korea / Wm. Theodore de Bary and
>         JaHyun Kim Haboush, editors.
>    New York : Columbia University Press, 1985.
> ISBN         0231060521 (alk. paper)
>
>   Women and Confucian cultures in premodern China, Korea, and Japan
>      / edited by Dorothy Ko, JaHyun Kim Haboush, and Joan R. Piggott.
>   Berkeley : University of California Press, c2003.
>   Pt. 1. Scripts of male dominance.  The patriarchal family
>      paradigm in eighth-century Japan / Hiroko Sekiguchi ; The last
>      classical female sovereign: K?ken-Sh?toku Tenn? / Joan R.
>      Piggott ; Representation of females in twelfth-century Korean
>      historiography / Hai-soon Lee -- The presence and absence of
>      female musicians and music in China / Joseph S.C. Lam -- Pt. 2.
>      Propagating Confucian virtues.  Woomen and the transmission of
>      Confucian culture in Song China / Jian Zang ; Propagating
>      female virtues in Chos?n Korea / Martina Deuchler ; State
>      indoctrination of filial piety in Tokugawa Japan: sons and
>      daughters in the Official records of filial piety / Noriko
>      Sugano -- Pt. 3. Female education in practice.  Norms and texts
>      for women's education in Tokugawa Japan / Martha C. Tocco ;
>      Competing claims on womanly virtue in late imperial China /
>      Fangqin Du and Susan Mann -- Pt. 4. Corporeal and textual
>      expressions of female subjectivity.  Discipline and
>      transformation: body and practice in the lives of Daoist holy
>      women of Tang China / Suzanne E. Cahill ; Versions and
>      subversions: patriarchy and polygamy in Korean narratives / JaHyan
>      Kim Haboush.
> ISBN         0520231058 (cloth : alk. paper)
> ISBN         0520231384 (pbk. : alk. paper)
> --------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Articles (other than those published within the books cited above)
>
> "The Sirhak Movement of the late Yi dynasty"
> _Korean Culture_ (Los Angeles, CA) 8:2 1987 pp. 20-27
> Vol: 8, no.2 (Sum
> <ISSN>0270-1618</ISSN>
>
> "Filial emotions and filial values: changing patterns in the discourse of 
> filiality in late Choson Korea"
> _Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies_ (Cambridge, MA) 55:1 (Jun 1995)
>      pp 129-177
> <ISSN>0073-0548</ISSN>
>
>
> "Yun Hyu and the search for dominance: a seventeenth-century Korean 
> reading of the Offices of Zhou and the Rituals of Zhou"
> In: Elman, Benjamin A.; Kern, Martin, eds. _Statecraft and classical 
> learning: the Rituals of Zhou in East Asian history_.
> Leiden, The Netherlands; Boston, Mass.: Brill, 2010.
> pp.  309-329
>
>
>
> "Pre-modern national identity? Problems of conceptualization in Korean 
> history"
>  In: _Sae ch'onny?on Han'gugin ?ui chongch'es?ong: che 11-hoe Han'gukhak 
> Kukche Haksul Hoe?ui nonmunjip = Korean identity in the new millennium: 
> proceedings of the 11th International Conference on Korean Studies_. 
> Kyonggi-do Songnam-si: Han'guk Ch?ongsin Munhwa Y?on'guw?on, 2001. pp. 
> 57-64
>
> "Filial emotions and filial values: changing patterns in the discourse of 
> filiality in late Choson Korea"
> In: Corrigan, John, ed. _Religion and emotion: approaches and 
> interpretations_. New York; Oxford, England: Oxford University Press, 
> 2004. pp  75-113
>
> "The Confucianization of Korean society"
> In: Rozman, Gilbert, ed. _The East Asian region: Confucian heritage and 
> its modern adaptation_. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton UP, 1991.
> pp. 84-110
>
> "Dead bodies in the postwar discourse of identity in seventeenth-century 
> Korea: subversion and literary production in the private sector [Talch'on 
> mongyurok (Dream Journey to Talch'on) by Yun Kyeson, P'isaeng mongyurok 
> (Mr. P'i's Dream Journey), and Kangdo mongyurok (Dream Journey to Kanghwa 
> Island] _Journal of Asian Studies_ 62,2 (May 2003)
> pp.  415-442
> <ISSN>0021-9118</ISSN>
>
>
> "Constructing the center: the ritual controversy and the search for a new 
> identity in seventeenth-century Korea"
> In: Haboush, JaHyun Kim; Deuchler, Martina, eds. _Culture and the state in 
> late Choson Korea_ Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Asia Center, 1999. 
> pp. 46-90
>
> "In search of history in democratic Korea: the discourse of modernity in 
> contemporary historical fiction"
> In: Chow, Kai-wing; Doak, Kevin M.; Fu, Poshek, eds. _Constructing 
> nationhood in modern East Asia_. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 
> 2001.
> pp. 189-214
>
>
> "Gender and language in historical narratives in Korea"
> In: Conference of AKSE (17th: 1995: Prague, Czech Republic). _17th 
> conference of the Association for Korean Studies in Europe: abstracts: 
> Prague, April 21-25, 1995_. Prague: Institute of East Asian Studies, 
> Charles University, 1995.
> pp. 76-79
>
>
> "Private memory and public history: the memoirs of Lady Hyegy?ong and 
> testimonial literature"
> In: Kim-Renaud, Young-Key, ed. Creative women of Korea: the fifteenth 
> through the twentieth centuries. Armonk, N.Y.; London: M.E. Sharpe, 2004. 
> pp.  122-141
>
>
> "Confucian rhetoric and ritual as techniques of political dominance: 
> Yongjo's use of the royal lecture", _Journal of Korean Studies_ (Seattle)
> 5 (1984) pp. 39-62
>
> "Rescoring the universal in a Korean mode: eighteenth-century Korean 
> culture"
> In: Kim, Hongnam, ed. _Korean arts of the eighteenth century: splendor 
> & simplicity_. New York: Weatherhill: Asia Society Galleries, 1993. 
> pp. 23-33
>
> "Contesting Chinese time, nationalizing temporal space: temporal 
> inscription in late Choson Korea"
> In: Struve, Lynn A., ed. _Time, temporality, and imperial transition: East 
> Asia from Ming to Qing_. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press; Ann Arbor, 
> Mich.: Association for Asian Studies, 2005. (Asian interactions and 
> comparisons)
> pp. 115-141
>
> "Gender and the politics of language in Choson Korea"
> In: Elman, Benjamin A.; Duncan, John B.; Ooms, Herman, eds. _Rethinking 
> Confucianism: past and present in China, Japan, Korea, and Vietnam_. Los 
> Angeles: University of California, 2002.
> (UCLA Asian Pacific monograph series)
> pp. 220-257
>
> "Perceptions of Korean culture in the United States"
> _Korea Focus_ (Seoul) 1.2 (1983)
> pp. 72-86
> <ISSN>1225-8113</ISSN>
>
> "The dual nature of cultural discourse in Choson Korea"
> In: Luk, Bernard Hung-Kay, ed._ Contacts between cultures. Volume 4. 
> Eastern Asia: history and social sciences_. Lewiston, N.Y.: Edwin Mellen 
> Press, 1992.
> pp. 194-196
>
> E&OE  I wish to acknowledge the Bibliography of Asian Studies for
> these citations--with the note that the BAS actually includes many
> other materials which are in the collected volumes which Professor
> JaHyun Kim Haboush edited.                                   FFC
>
> Frank F. Conlon
> Frank F. Conlon
> Professor Emeritus of History, South Asian
>      Studies & Comparative Religion
> University of Washington
> Seattle, WA 98195-3560      USA
> Co-editor, H-ASIA
> Managing Director, Bibliography of Asian Studies Online
>
> ******************************************************************
>         To post to  H-ASIA  simply send your message to:
>                         <H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
>           For holidays or short absences send post to:
>                 <listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
>                         SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
>        Upon return, send post with message SET H-ASIA MAIL
>        H-ASIA WEB HOMEPAGE URL:    http://h-net.msu.edu/~asia/
 
No comments:
Post a Comment