Acta Koreana Vol. 11, No. 3 (2008. 12)

Guest Editor’s Introduction: Christianity and the Emergence of Korean Modernity
By Don Beker,1–7

ARTICLES

For God and Home: Women’s Education in Early Korean Protestantism
By Chong Bum Kim, 9–28

“To Determine Our Own Course:” The Wilsonian Moment,Protestant Christianity, and the Korean Students in the United States
By Anne S. Choi, 29–45

Saving Knowledge: Catholic Educational Policy in the Late Choson Dynasty
By Franklin Rausch, 47–85

Korean Christian Theologies of the Holy Spirit: Their Distinctiveness and Their Origins in Korean Experience
By Kirsteen Kim, 87–112

A Study of the Fundamentalist Tendency in Korean Protestantism: With Special Reference to the Korean Presbyterian Church
By Jae-Buhm Hwang,113–142

Tracing Trans-Pacific Continuity in the Faith of Second-Generation Korean Christians in the U.S.A.
By Soyoung Park,143–159

Ideology as Smokescreen: North Korea’s Juche Thought
By Brian Myers, 161–182

LITERATURE IN TRANSLATION

“Hwang Chini 1” by Ch’oe Inho
Translated by Benjamin Cheung, 183–195

“Dead Person” by Ch’oe Inho
Translated by Na Young Bae, 197–213

INTERVIEW

An Interview with Professor Hwang Byung-Ki
Conducted by Tschung-Sun Kim, 215–234

BOOK REVIEWS

Human Decency.
By By Kong Ji Yŏng.
Translated by Bruce and Ju-Chan Fulton.
Dafna Zur, 235–239

Domesticating the Dharma: Buddhist Cults and the Hwaŏm Synthesis in Silla Korea .
By Richard D. McBride, II
Dane Alston, 239–246

Oral Literature of Korea.
Comp. by Seo Daeseok, ed. by Peter H. Lee.
James H. Grayson,246–248

Korean Spirituality.
By Don Baker.
Richard D. McBride, II,248–251

Korean Cuisine: An Illustrated History.
By Michael J. Pettid.
Michael Reinschmidt, 251–257

North Korea: The Paranoid Peninsula . A Modern History (2nd revised edition).
By Paul French.
Leonid Petrov, 257–260

There a Petal Silently Falls.
By Ch’oe Yun.
Joanna Elfving-Hwang,261–265

The Making of Modern Korea.
By Adrian Buzo.
Adam Cathcart, 265–269