British Academy: The UK's National Academy for the Humanities and Social Sciences
Social and Cultural Change in late pre-modern Korea
A one-day conference organised in collaboration with the
British Association for Korean Studies
Abstracts
Publishing and translation in the Chosôn period
Professor Peter Kornicki - Professor of East Asian Studies, University of Cambridge
Korea is famous in the global history of printing not only for the concrete evidence of printing in the eighth century found at the Bulguksa but also for the development and use of movable type several centuries before Gutenberg in Europe, but there is another reason for taking interest in the Korean book in the Chos?n dynasty (1392-1910). The creation of the Hangul alphabet in the fifteenth century made it possible for the first time to print not only Chinese texts but also Korean texts, and in this paper I shall be focusing on a range of publications which combine original Chinese texts with Korean translations and interpretations presented in Hangul. These books, known as ?nhaebon, are remarkable for their commitment to translation, that is, for the assumption that there was a class of readers for whom the Chinese texts are too difficult and for their provision of a mediated text that was accessible to a wider range of readers. It seems that nowhere else in the East Asian world engaged with Chinese texts, even canonical texts like the Four Books of the Confucian tradition, in this way. With slides from books preserved in libraries in Korea and Britain, I shall show what is unique about these books and consider the question of the widening range of readers in Chos?n dynasty (1392-1910).