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Promoting Friendly Relations Promoting Friendly Relations
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Racial Sensibilities Racial Sensibilities
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Applied Christianity Applied Christianity
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Between Here and There Between Here and There
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Sacred Cause of Liberty Sacred Cause of Liberty
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Fare Thee Well Fare Thee Well
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Notes Notes
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10 Diasporic Korean Christianity in the United States, 1922–1941
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Published:March 2014
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Abstract
This chapter examines the transnational relationship between nationalism and Christianity by focusing on diasporic Korean Christianity in the earlier decades of the twentieth century. It looks at a publication called the Korean Student Bulletin (KSB), sponsored by the International YMCA, to show how Korean international and Korean American college and graduate students navigated their times while attending schools in the United States. The KSB provides access to the perspectives of students and others who appeared in its pages during the years of its publication from 1922 to 1941 The themes of race and religion, migration and exile, and colonialism and independence help frame the discussion of the KSB as a marker of the role of religion in the history of Koreans on the mainland and in Hawaii. This chapter considers how Protestant Christianity served as an avenue for students to articulate what constituted a kind of wilderness experience as they faced uncertain and difficult times.
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