Adam Bohnet Associate Professor Kings University College At Western Commons username: @abohnet Following 7 members View ProfileActivitySites 0Following 7Followers 3Groups 9ForumsDocs Academic Interests Commons GroupsHCAssyriologistsHistoryLate Medieval HistoryOrigenOttoman and Turkish StudiesPersian and Persianate StudiesRenaissance / Early Modern StudiesSocial History of ArchivesUnion for Nubian Studies Recent Commons Activity joined the group Assyriologists joined the group Union for Nubian Studies joined the group Persian and Persianate Studies Blog Posts PublicationsBooks: “Turning toward Edification: Foreigners in Chosŏn Korea.” University of Hawai’i Press, 2020. E-book is open access. Peer Reviewed Articles: “Lies, Rumours and Sino-Korean Relations: The Pseudo-Fujianese Incident of 1687,” Acta Koreana 19, no. 2 (2016): 1-29. “Debating Tumen valley Jurchens during the Late Sixteenth and Early Seventeenth Centuries,” Korean Studies 39 (December, 2015): 23-44. “Subversive Ming Loyalist Narratives in Late Choson Korea.” Seoul Journal of Korean Studies 25, no. 1 (June, 2012): 1-31. “From Liaodongese Refugee to Ming Loyalist: The Historiography of the Sanggok Ma, a Ming Migrant Descent Group in Late Choson Korea.” Review of Korean Studies 15, no. 1 (June 2012): 109-139. “From Kang Shijue to Duke Chu-Hat-hall, and Back Again: Biography and State Control in Northern Hamgyong.” Korean Histories 3.1 ( 2012): 3-22. Available at http://www.koreanhistories.org. “Ruling Ideology and Marginal Subjects: Ming Loyalism and Foreign Lineages in Late Choson Korea.” Journal of Early Modern History 15, no. 6 (December 2011): 477-505. “Matteo Ricci and Nicholas Trigault’s Description of the Literati of China.” Quaderni D’Italianistica 21: 2 (September 2000): 77-92. Book Chapters and other publications: 만주실록 역주 [Manju i yargiyan kooli : an annotated translation], translated and edited by 고려대학교 민족문화 연구원 만주학 센터 [The Center for Manchu Studies at the Research Institute for Korean Studies of Korea University]. I was a minor participant next to others, but my name is listed. Seoul: Somyŏng Publishing, 2014. Sinhwa, yoksa wa yuon bio [Myth, History and Rumour], Webjin Minyon [Rikszine] 11 (2012.03) [informal publication] ‘On Either Side the River:’ The Rise of the Manchu State and Choson’s Jurchen Subjects.” Toronto Studies in Central and Inner Asia 9 (2008): 111-125. “Syumidu ui yoksa hak [André Schmid’s Historiography].” A Korean-language survey of André Schmid’s scholarship published as part of the Korean translation of his book Korea between Empires [Korean Title: Cheguk ku sai ui han’guk] (Seoul: Hyumanisut’u ch’ulp’ansa, 2007), 735-746. Book Reviews and Review Essays: “Translating the T’aengniji: A Review of Inshil Choe Yoon’s A Place to Live/ Review Essay,” Seoul Journal of Korean Studies 33, no. 2 (December 2020): 569–577. “Review of Under the Ancestor’s Eyes: Kinship, Status and Locality in Pre-Modern Korea, by Martina Deuchler.” International journal of Korean history 24, no. 1 (2019): 187–198. [Review essay]. “Chosŏn Reconsidered.” Cross-Currents: East Asian History and Culture Review, no. 31 (June 1, 2019): 205–215. Bohnet, Adam. “A New Discussion of Sino-Korean Relations During the Chosŏn Period.” Cross-currents (Honolulu, Hawaii) 3, no. 2 (2015): 629–636. Review of “Masato Hasegawa, “Provisions and Profits in a Wartime Borderland: Supply Lines and Society in the Border Region between China and Korea, 1592-1644” (Ph.D. diss., Yale University, 2013) for Dissertation Reviews, May 2015 Review of Pae Usong, Choson kwa Chunghwa – Choson i kkumkkugo sangsanghan segye wa munmyong (Seoul: Tolbegye ch’ulp’ansa, 2014), for Cross-currents: East Asian History and Culture Review, e-journal of September 2014 (forthcoming: print journal November 2014). Review of Kenneth M. Swope, A Dragon’s Head and a Serpent’s Tail: Ming China and the First Great East Asian War (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2009), Journal of Ming Studies 67 (2013): 77-79. Review of David M. Robinson, ed., Culture, Courtiers and Competition: The Ming Court (1368-1644) (Cambridge: Harvard University Asia Center, 2008)), The Journal of Northeast Asian History 9, no. 2 (Winter 2012): 229-234.