![]() Review of David Ambaras, Japan's Imperial Underworlds: Intimate Encounters at the Borders of Empire, Social History Vol. UVACollab Users: Navigate to your Home site in UVACollab and click on Course Evaluations in the tool menu. Review of Seonmin Kim, Ginseng and Borderland: Territorial Boundaries and Political Relations between Qing China and Chosŏn Korea, The Journal of Asian Studies, Vol. With Kirk Larsen. “Simple Conversation or Secret Treaty? The Taft-Katsura Memorandum in Korean Historical Memory,” Journal of Korean Studies, Vol. With Aaron Skabelund. “Tigers-Real and Imagined-in Korea’s Physical and Cultural Landscape.” Environmental History, Vol. With Aaron Skabelund. "'Bite, Bite against the Iron Cage': The Colonial Seoul and Taipei Zoos and Empire’s Ambivalent Dreamscape." The Journal of Asian Studies, Vol. ![]() "Reeds, River Islands, and Inter-Imperial Conflict on the Early Twentieth-Century Sino-Korean Border." Water History Vol. Before Stanford he earned a bachelor’s degree in History with a minor in Korean from Brigham Young University.īlood, Water, and Ice: The Yalu River and Imperial Border-Making in East Asia, 1894-1945 Prior to joining the History faculty at UVA Seeley completed his doctoral studies at Stanford University, where his research was supported by the Korea Foundation and the Freeman Spogli Institute. Robert Kelly at University of Virginia - 3.9 / 5 Overall Quality Based on 23 ratings Robert Kelly Professor in the Engineering department at University of Virginia 50 Would take again 3. ![]() As part of his multilingual research on Korean history, Seeley has also published on US-Korean diplomatic history in Journal of Korean Studies, a longue-durée survey of Korean tiger-human relations in Environmental History, and an article in the Journal of Asian Studies on the history of Japanese colonial zoos in Seoul and Taipei. Drawing on previously unexamined sources in Chinese, Korean, and Japanese, he argues that the seasonally changing river was a critical actor in border creation and contestation. His current book project examines the Yalu River boundary between northern Korea and China during the period 1894-1945. Joseph Seeley is an Assistant Professor and specialist in the history of Korea, the Japanese Empire, and East Asian environmental history. ![]()
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