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| 제목 | [하버드대학교 김구포럼 2024년 10월]The First Amerasians: Mixed Race Koreans from Camptowns to Americ | ||
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| 작성자 | admin | 작성일 | 2025-10-31 |
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The First Amerasians: Mixed Race Koreans from Camptowns to America
Date and Time October 24, 2024 04:30PM - 06:00PM America/New_York Location Thomas Chan-Soo Kang Room (S050), CGIS South Building,
1730 Cambridge Street, Cambridge, MA 02138 Kim Koo Forum Yuri W. Doolan Assistant Professor of History and Women''s, Gender, and
Sexuality Studies, Brandeis University
Yuri W. Doolan (PhD, Northwestern University 2019) is
Assistant Professor of History and Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies and
the inaugural chair of Asian American and Pacific Islander Studies at Brandeis
University. He is an award-winning historian whose work explores the anti-Asian
racism and structural violence of US militarism and empire.
His book The First Amerasians: Mixed Race Koreans from
Camptowns to America (New York: Oxford University Press, 2024) tells the
powerful, oftentimes heartbreaking, story of how Americans created and used the
concept of the "Amerasian" to remove thousands of mixed race children
from their Korean mothers in US-occupied South Korea to adoptive American homes
during the 1950s and 1960s. The First Amerasians explores the Cold War
ideologies undergirding this so-called rescue and shows how this process of
child removal and placement via US refugee, adoption, and immigration laws
profoundly shaped the lives of mixed race Koreans and their mothers. Yuri is
currently underway on a second major book project that investigates the
relationship between US military prostitution in Cold War Asia and the Pacific
and anti-Asian racism and violence in US society and culture.
Yuri is also the author of a number of peer-reviewed
essays and public facing works exploring the lasting legacies and human
consequences of the Korean War. His research on military brides, transnational
and transracial adoption, mixed race Asians, the US camptown military sex
industry, and “comfort women” appear in Critical Ethnic Studies, The Journal of
Asian American Studies, Diplomatic History, Together at Last: Stories of
Adoption and Reunion in the Age of DNA, Mixed Korean: Our Stories (인종주의의덫을 넘어서: 혼혈 한국인, 혼혈 입양인 이야), The Journal of American Ethnic
History, Koreatowns: Exploring the Economics, Politics, and Identities of
Korean Spatial Formation, 경계를 넘는 한인들: 이주, 젠더, 세대와 귀속의 정치,
and a permanent installation in Berlin called Die ?Trostfrauen“ und der
gemeinsame Kampf gegen sexualisierte Gewalt.
Yuri’s research and writing has been supported by the
Social Science Research Council, the Korea Foundation, the Academy of Korean
Studies, the Fulbright Program, the Mandel Center for the Humanities, the
Northeast Asia Council, the American Council of Learned Societies, the Mellon
Foundation, as well as internal sources at Northwestern University and Brandeis
University.
Chaired by Kelly Mee Rich, Assistant Professor of English
and Creative Writing, Wellesley College
Abstract: In the years surrounding the Korean War, thousands of
mixed race children were born to American military personnel and local women in
the camptowns neighboring US bases. The First Amerasians tells the powerful,
oftentimes heartbreaking story of how Americans created and used the concept of
the Amerasian to remove these children from their mothers to adoptive US homes
during the 1950s and 1960s. In recovering this history, Yuri W. Doolan reveals
how the Amerasian is not simply a mixed race person fathered and abandoned by a
US serviceman in Asia, nor a racial term used to describe individuals with one
American and one Asian parent like its popular definition suggests. Rather, the
Amerasian is a Cold War construct whose “rescue” has been utilized to repudiate
accusations of US imperialism and achieve sentimental victories in the
aftermath of wars not quite won by the military. From such constructions,
Americans established various refugee, adoption, and immigration laws that
would lead to the placement of Korean children in the United States and, later,
mixed race Vietnamese and their relatives.
*** To attend this event online, please register here.
Generously supported by the Kim Koo Foundation |
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