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GOLDSEA |
ASIAMS.NET |
ASIAN AMERICAN ISSUES
KOREA OR COREA?
(Updated
Wednesday, Jan 22, 2025, 06:38:55 AM.)
e at GoldSea choose to honor the more natural rendering commonly used in the English-speaking world prior to the Japanese annexation and colonialization of Corea beginning in 1905.
American and English books published during the latter half of the 19th century generally referred to the nation as "Corea" as recently as the years immediately preceding Japan's formal annexation of Corea in 1910. An 1851 map of East Asia by Englishman John Tallis labels the nation Corea. The same spelling is used in The Mongols, a 1908 history of the Mongol race by Jeremiah Curtin, the world's foremost Asia scholar of the day, as well as in several books by American missionaries published between 1887 and 1905.
Japan's annexation of Corea didn't become formal until 1910, but for all practical purposes Japan had become the power that regulated Corea's relations with the outside world in 1897 when it defeated China in a war over Japan's ambition to exercise control over Corea. The only other power willing to contest Japan's supremacy in the Corean peninsula was Russia. When it was easily defeated by Japan at Port Arthur in 1905, the annexation of Corea became a fait accompli. Anxious to avoid a costly Pacific conflict, President Wilson ignored the pleas of a delegation of Corean patriots and their American missionary supporters and turned a blind eye to Japan's acts of formal annexation and colonization of Corea. During that period Japan mounted a campaign to push for the "Korea" useage by the American press. Why? For one of Japan's prospective colonies to precede its master in the alphabetical lineup of nations would be unseemly, Japanese imperialists decided.
Japan's colonial rule over Corea ended on August 15, 1945 when it lost World War II. Now that Corea is eagerly shedding the last vestiges of the colonial period, even demolishing public buildings erected by the Japanese (for example, the monstrously immense colonial governor's mansion), forward-thinking Corean and Corean American journalists, intellectuals and scholars are urging the American media to revert to the original, more natural rendering of Corea.
The changeover will pose a problem only in English-speaking nations as other western nations never accepted the "K" spelling. For example, France, Spain, Italy, Brazil, Argentina and Mexico, among many others, use the "C" rendering.
English convention, too, is on the side of the Corea rendering. Non-European names are romanized with a "C" (Cambodia, Canada, cocoa, Comanche, Congo, and even old Canton, for example) except where the first letter is followed by an "e" or an "i", (as in Kenya). Other than that, the "K" spelling is used only in connoting childlike ignorance of spelling conventions ("Kitty Kat" and "Skool", for examples).
Therefore, the American "K" spelling is
- offensive from a historical standpoint (remember "Peking" and "Canton"?);
- violates western rendering conventions;
- suggests a lack of sophistication toward Corea; and
- by connoting naiveté, imputes a lack of sophistication to Corea and its people.
The Corea rendering will ultimately become universal when more Americans are educated as to the offensive and relatively recent origin of the "Korea" rendering. The English-speaking world was responsible for agreeing to Japanese efforts to change the spelling of Corea's name in English useage. Who better than concerned Asian Americans to help change it back?
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Discussions posted during the past year remain available for browsing.
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WHAT YOU SAY
[This page is closed to new input. --Ed.]
Look the reason why ITaly France Spain and all Romance LAnguange spaking state use the C is becasue there in no K. To me Korea is Korea, Taiwan is Formosa, Mynamar is Burma, MAlaysia is the MAlay states, Sri LAnka is Celyon, Cambodia is not Kampuechia, and KEnya is named after the nations father and first PResident KEnyatta...so here what i think of your Corea idea :P... BTW for all that the Koreans may have been abused by the JApanese, there were more than ample Korean soldiers in the JApanese army and I dont rememebr ever and I do mean ever being told of a Korea Liberation Army, like that in Poland or much of occupied europe. So Korea Today, Korea Forever...
calling it like it is   
Wednesday, November 21, 2001 at 10:43:35 (PST)
Sorry. Previous URL contained the blank character.
The right URL is as follows.
http://www.postmuseum.go.kr/English/cpe/ cpe110w_mr.asp?rdoSelView=1&pYear1=2000&pYear2= 1884&pYear3=1910&Opt=2&pPeriod=1&ViewOpt=1
http://kr.dailynews.yahoo.com/headlines/ so/20010817/mw/2001081731128.html
Shame   
Monday, November 12, 2001 at 21:24:49 (PST)
[Blanks are used to line-break the URLs to keep it from stretching the page out of its normal width. --Ed]
Rumor that Japan changed the South Korean name of a country is a lie.
It is very impolite to Japanese people.
In Korea, the name "KOREA" is formally used since 1885.
If you go to a South Korean museum, the old printed matter written to be "KOREA" can be seen.
The stamp published in South Korea is a good example.
Please see the stamp in 1885 by the following Web page.
http://www.postmuseum.go.kr/English/cpe/ cpe110w_mr.asp?rdoSelView=1&pYear1= 2000&pYear2=1884&pYear3=1910& Opt=2&pPeriod=1&ViewOpt=1
The intention of the anti-Japan netizen who spread this rumor is written to the following article.
http://kr.dailynews.yahoo.com/headlines/so/ 20010817/mw/2001081731128.html
Shame   
Sunday, November 11, 2001 at 11:20:55 (PST)
god sakes, will u all tak about somethign more importnat, there's a world war going on
bruce withheld   
Friday, November 09, 2001 at 08:19:01 (PST)
I personally and strongly agree that " Korea " should be correct to it's original name " Corea ", not to mentioning " Corea " looks lot more beautiful and natual!
Seoulman joseph1@centurytel.net   
Saturday, November 03, 2001 at 23:32:05 (PST)
I agree with this indivivual about the
c & not k usage.especially if it was
impossed upon by an invading nation. i
myself knowing both spanish&english see
it writen both ways.and sometimes i did
wonder why that was.but if the people
will it they should change it back to
corea.it is similiar to what happened
in mexico,which is usually pronounced
as me"h"ico and not me"shee"co as it
should be.but then maybe that was cause
of a different reason all together. so
coreanos should feel proud to call them-
selves what ever they chose too.just a
tought for those who welcome it...
tenyoheyipilli intelligentsia_13@hotmail.com   
Thursday, November 01, 2001 at 13:38:14 (PST)
True is the saying, "A coin can only land on one side". I had mentioned in an earlier posting that the Japanese government had yet to officially apologize to those countries it had occupied and commit terrible atrocities against during World War II. Because of this, "Peace of Asia" wanted to read me the riot act. In the mere mention of this, he/she wrote me off as anti-Japan, only compelling me to reply. In explaining my affection for Japan, however, I have inevitably raised the ire of others on the other side of the coin.
Going by the moniker "The Facts Ellery Forgot" (TFEF), tried to malign my argument against blatant political correctness by introducing variables that I had not even debated; and in not doing so, I somehow swore blind allegiance to all policymaking by the Japanese government. If I may CTRL+C here like our bulletin board Jerry Lee Lewis has with me:
"If they should want to wipe out all traces of Japan, it is their country, it is their choice." Isolationism…great idea. Just what this world needs: more governments telling what we can and can't do. Korea would then share the same history Japan did in 1600 when it closed its borders to all outsiders. Since you brought it up, if Korea is to rid itself of "all traces of Japan", I only hope it starts with that sad excuse for pop music Japan calls "J-Pop". Yikes!
"So, to protect the feelings current generation Japanese, all Coreans should bear the memories of the occupation, right?" No, and by slicing and dicing up my earlier comments don't attempt to try to put words in my mouth. You seem to have enough of a difficulty with your own.
"Fact is, Corea has its reasons for changing her name." Like what? And when did she change its name? Supposedly "concerned Asian Americans" are trying to impose a new spelling on the English language - just as you have accused me of forcing my interest in Japan on others. For the record: I have no desire to proselytize the virtues of Japan over Korea, nor visa versa. You on the other hand seem to accuse those who wouldn't share your choice to misspell the word Korea as wrong and being a Japanese imperialist. How about 'Kimchi' with a 'C', Dr. Feelgood? Would that right the wrongs of the past?
"You forgot to mention Pearl Harbor. You have selective memory, don't you?" No, only the memory of my own family members who went to war against the Japanese during World War II. In employing a weak attempt to accuse me of a selective memory, your logic fails. Because I neglected to acknowledge the plight that the Tutsi tribes in Rwanda suffered at the hands of the Hutus in 1994 - that would imply that I stand on the side of the Hutus, right?
"Coreans wouldn't stoop to give a damn what you think." I applaud you on your clairvoyance in making this kind of a collective decision for all people of Korean descent. At what point were you granted permission by all people of Korean extraction to speak for them? No one here may give a damn about what I have to say my friend, but you obviously did.
He/she who goes by this name "The Facts Ellery Forgot" - let me be clear: they again exemplify the inconsideration people can develop when one tries to advance their own agenda at the cost of alienating all other perspectives. Through all their imbalanced banter, TFEF still offers us little in the way of meaningful rationale as to why this 'Corea' with a 'C' thing deserves justification. TFEF criticizes me with this broad brush of solidarity for anything posited by the Japanese government, and in this regard cites the issue of Japanese history textbooks to employ as their metaphor of what 'my' standpoint is.
What I can say is the Japanese government and school system would be 100% wrong for not acknowledging its horrible aggressions against Koreans in WWII in its history textbooks, and should provide its students with the truth as to the pain Korea and other countries suffered at that time because of Japan. Though Junichiro Koizumi has done more to reach out to other nations affected by Japan in WWII than most other late-week prime ministers there, it doesn't help in my opinion to make unscheduled visits to the Yasukuni shrine three days later. Japan hesitantly recognizes its hostility during WWII; and it is that hesitation to officially apologize to other countries that is wrong and goes against any diplomacy Japan hopes to build in the international arena.
Anyhow, "The Facts Ellery Forgot", worry about your own facts first before you try to define mine.
Ellery   
Thursday, November 01, 2001 at 07:01:17 (PST)
Well, I'm sorry to get off the topic a bit, but I think it's anachronistic to name a country after a dynasty that has ceased to exist for centuries. But if we were to, then I think the North Coreans are right to call it Chosun. Han guk is okay, but the chinese translation, "Big Country" spews forth so much ignorance and jingoism, (aka China=center of the universe, Japan=origin of the sun) that Chosun, land of morning calm, has a much more peaceful and poetic sound. (although I donno how "peaceful" it really is, when there is that horrific morning traffic in seoul) Of course, nowadays, anyone who wants to call Korea, Chosun is branded a communist so it may be difficult to pull off--
See? then we can debate whether it should be Chosun or Josun!!!! Hmm... oh no... second thought, Han guk might be better... but what if someone wants Han gook! no!
just some rambling thoughts
ka   
Wednesday, October 31, 2001 at 13:04:59 (PST)
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