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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

  1. offensive from a historical standpoint (remember "Peking" and "Canton"?);
  2. violates western rendering conventions;
  3. suggests a lack of sophistication toward Corea; and
  4. 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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WHAT YOU SAY

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Mike

Thou sayth much, I agree with thee.

It's...superficial, absurd, and politically irrelevant, plus the least being that after a century of usage, I prefer look and sound of K to C.
xboy    Monday, May 13, 2002 at 12:17:58 (PDT)
I know how much Korean people hate Japan and Japanese. I've also heard about intensive anti-Japan education in South Korean schools.
After all, this is kind of a source of Korean nationalism to some extent.

But isn't it time to get ovet this kind of old antagonism and hate politics? Korea or Corea issue seems so absurd to me.
Japan even had trouble having its correct images represented in English media at that time and , honestly, I don't think the nation was capable of this kind of "propaganda" on such a little and superficial issue. In the middle of modernization of its society and economy, Japan had more things to pay attention to, I guess.

Moreover, Korean campaigners have failed to prove that this so-called change of the spelling was actually campaigned by Japan to precede Korea in the alphabetical lineup of nations. They simply assume it.

But it's true that Japanese people never spell so many words starting with C in thier Roma-ji English way, like Kobe instead of Cobe, Koto instead of Coto and Konica instead of Conica.
So it's still possible that they actually changed the name of Corea because they found it more convinient.

But again, Korean campaigners never show any proof that Japanese did it for alphabetical lineup.
After all, this kind of name issue is something only Korean people, most of them very nationalistic, care, isn't it?
I also find it very strange that this issue was conviniently brought up right after Japan and Korea argued over the world-cup name.

I also find it very offnsive and politically incorrect that some Korean people blame Japan and Japanese for absolutely anything forever like this Korea or Corea issue.

Off course, I have great respect for all the Korean people. So if you prefer, I can call you Corean..but you know, it still seems absurd to me.

Mike    Monday, May 13, 2002 at 01:12:56 (PDT)

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