
Korean Studies at Columbia
Weatherhead East Asian Institute
Korean Studies in the Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures
The Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures (EALAC) is responsible for humanities-related courses in East Asian studies, including history, language, literature, religion, and philosophy. EALAC has offered Korean language instruction since 1962, and now offers Korean language courses up to the fourth-year level annually, and other courses on Korean reading, including modern documentary Korean and Korean readings in classical Chinese, upon student demand. Beginning with two students in 1962, since the early 1990s enrolment in Korean language course has regularly exceed 100 students. The Korean language program, headed by Professor Ledyard until 1979, has been under the direction of Ms. Carol Schultz since 1980, and has now developed into a model for other programs around the country. Ms. Schulz currently heads a team of three language lecturers, and is also active professionally in international Korean language teaching groups. There are usually upwards of ten courses on Korea taught in EALAC every year, from language and literature to civilization and history. The department hosts an average of five to fifteen undergraduate majors and six to ten graduate students in Korean Studies every year.
Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures
Korean Language Program at Columbia University
Brief History of the Korean Studies Program at Columbia
The history of Korean Studies at Columbia begins as early as 1931, when Korean students in the New York area donated a number of Korean books to Columbia and established a Korean Library and Culture Center. In 1934, Dr. Eungpal Yun, Minister of the Korean Methodist Church, taught the first Korean language course at Columbia. A formal Korean Studies program began in 1962, when a position of Professor of Korean was established. The first scholar to hold the position was Dr. William E. Skillend, a specialist in Korean literature. Dr. Skillend returned to his native England in 1964, at which time he was replaced by Dr. Gari Ledyard, who taught Korean history at Columbia until his retirement in 2000. Also in 1962, the Korean Collection was established within the East Asian Library (now the C.V. Starr East Asian Library), bringing together all books relating to Korea, which until then had been kept in other collections, cataloguing them according to the classification system of the National Central Library in Seoul. Korean-language and Korea-related books and periodicals form a major part of the East Asian Library, overseen by a full time librarian responsible for Korean materials. Korean Collection at C.V. Starr
Korea Collection at C.V. Starr Library
Columbia’s Commitment to Korean Studies
In addition to the courses in EALAC, there are Korea-related courses taught regularly in the departments of political science, anthropology, and economics, and in the law and business schools. Besides the Center for Korean Research of the East Asian Institute and the Korean Studies program at EALAC, Columbia also houses the only Center for Korean Legal Studies in the United States. For thirty years, Columbia has been committed to the expansion and improvement of Korean Studies in the United States, and the University will remain intellectually and financially supportive of Korean Studies, as an integral part of its research and curriculum, into the future.
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The Center for Korean Legal Studies