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NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS Vipan Chandra is associate professor of history at Wheaton College and a frequent contributor to this journal. Jahyun Haboush holds a Ph.D. from Columbia University in Korean studies and is currently teaching courses on Korean culture and history at the University of Illinois. She is co-editor, with Wm. Theodore deBary, of The Rue ofConfucianism in Korea (New York: Columbia University Press, 1985), in which her article, "The Education ofthe Yi Crown Prince: A Study in Confucian Pedagogy," appears. Fujiya Kawashima is associate professor of history at Bowling Green State University whose research interests are in Korean social and intellectual history. In addition to his earlier article on mid-Yi dynasty hyangan in volume 2 of this journal, he has also published "An Archetype of the Korean Intellectuals," Ajia Karon 10, no. 9 (1980): 113-37. Laurel Kendall is assistant curator of the Asian Ethnographic Collection at the American Museum of Natural History. Her book, Shamans, Housewives, and Other Restless Spirits: Women in Korean Ritual Life, is soon to be published by the University of Hawaii Press. Young I. Lew, a frequent contributor to this journal, is a specialist on the history of the late Chosön (Yi) period and is currently a member of the history faculty at Korea University (Koryö taehakkyo) in Seoul. Professor Lew has recently published "The Shufeldt Treaty and Early Korean-American Interaction, 1882-1905," in After One Hundred Years: Continuity and Change in Korean-American Relations, ed. Sung-joo Han (Seoul: Asiatic Research Center, Korea University, 1982), pp. 3-27. Peter Lowe, professor of history at the University of Manchester, specializes in the history of international relations. Roy Andrew Miller is professor ofJapanese language and linguistics at the University of Washington. A frequent contributor to ourjournal, he has written extensively on the Korean language and the relationship of early Korean to the Ural-Altaic languages. M. N. Pak is professor of Korean studies at Moscow State University. James B. Palais teaches Korean history at the University of Washington. Wayne Patterson, associate professor of history at Saint Norbert College, is a specialist on Korean immigration to the United States and Korean-American relations . He is co-editor aîThe TwoKoreas in WorldPolitics (1983),Japan in Transition: Thought and Action in the Meiji Era, 1868-1912 (1984), and One Hundred Years ofKorean-American Relations, 1882-1982 (1985). Michael Robinson is assistant professor of history at the University of Southern California. He is currently preparing a book manuscript on nationalism in the 1920s. The editors wish to acknowledge the indispensablefinancial support afforded to thisjournal by the Joint Committee onKorean Studies oftheSocialScienceResearch Council, theAmerican Council of Learned Societies, and the School ofInternational Studies at the University of Washington. ...

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