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Nam Center Colloquium Series

Progeny of Fallen Royals: Kaesŏng Wang in Chosŏn Korea
Wednesday, October 7, 2015
4:00-6:00 PM
Room 1636 School of Social Work Building Map
Speaker: Eugene Park, Korea Foundation Associate Professor of History, University of Pennsylvania

As the descendants of the Koryŏ dynasty (918–1392) supplanted by the Chosŏn dynasty (1392–1910), the Kaesŏng Wang negotiated a new sociopolitical terrain in early modern Korea. Once the Chosŏn state ended a bloody persecution (1394–1416) which virtually exterminated the Wangs, the lucky survivors and their descendants performed state-sanctioned ancestor veneration ritual of sacrificial offering (pongsa) to Koryŏ kings. Moreover, many passed the government service examinations, entered officialdom, commanded armies, and constituted local elite lineages in various parts of Korea. The most privileged among the Wangs were no different from the general aristocracy (yangban) pursuing classical Chinese education and prescribing to Confucian moral norms such as the cardinal virtue of subject’s loyalty (ch’ung) to the ruler. All the same, an emerging body of subversive narratives, written and oral, began expressing sympathy toward Koryŏ and its progeny as victims of Chosŏn. The Wangs themselves refrained from openly concurring until after the end of the Chosŏn dynasty.

Eugene Y. Park is Korea Foundation Associate Professor of History at the University of Pennsylvania. The author of "Between Dreams and Reality: The Military Examination in Chosŏn Korea, 1600–1894" (Harvard University Asia Center, 2007) and "A Family of No Prominence: The Descendants of Pak Tokhwa and the Birth of Modern Korea" (Stanford University Press, 2014), Park received his B.A. from UCLA, followed by M.A. and Ph.D. from Harvard University. Currently he is writing a monograph, "Progeny of Fallen Royals: Resurrection of the Kaesŏng Wang in Korea," which examines positions occupied by the descendants of Koryŏ dynasty in Chosŏn and modern Korean politics and society. He is also editing, with Yi Tae-Jin, "Peace in the East: An Chunggŭn and Asia in the Age of Empires," and with George L. Kallander and Michael J. Pettid, "The Cambridge History of Korea, Volume 3: The Chosŏn Dynasty, 1392–1910."
Building: School of Social Work Building
Event Type: Lecture / Discussion
Tags: Asia
Source: Happening @ Michigan from Nam Center for Korean Studies, Asian Languages and Cultures