Film star Ko Chun-hsiung dies aged 70 - Taipei Times


Institute for Corean-American Studies





Hesung Chun Koh

Dr. Hesung Chun Koh is Co-Founder, Chair and President Emerita of East Rock Institute (ERI), the nation�s first institution dedicated to Korean and Korean Diaspora culture.

Ko chun hsiung biography of donald Born in Kaohsiung on Jan. He won in the same category at the festival seven years later. In , Ko was elected to the legislature as a KMT candidate. Ko was married twice. Ko and Tsai married in and had a son and a daughter.

She is also Director Emerita of Research at the Human Relations Area Files (HRAF) at Yale University. As a researcher, teacher, writer, social activist and artist, Hesung dedicated the past sixty years to ERI and mentored countless students and parents from both Korean and non-Korean universities even after her retirement from Yale .

Before coming to the United States at the age of 19, Hesung majored in Korean and English Literature at Ewha Women�s University.

In the States, she double majored in Economics and Sociology at Dickinson College (B.A.). Hesung continued her study of Sociology, Anthropology and also received interdisciplinary training in planning of change at Boston University, and worked as a fellow and faculty member at the University�s Sociology Department and Human Relations Center (M.A., Ph.D.).

  • About: Ko Chun-hsiung - DBpedia Association
  • Film star Ko Chun-hsiung dies aged 70 - Taipei Times
  • She conducted her post-doctoral work in Chinese Studies as a National Defense Education Act (NDEA) Fellow at Harvard University and Georgetown University.

    Dr. Koh has taught and conducted research at Boston University, Albertus Magnus College, Yale University, Yale Law School, the National Museum of Ethnology in Osaka (NME) and the International Research Center for Japanese Studies in Kyoto, Japan..

    Co-teaching East Asian Law and Society at the Yale Law School from to , Hesung became the first Asian woman to teach there.

    See full list on howold.co Looks like we're missing the following data in en-US or en-US Login to edit. Keyboard Shortcuts. Login to report an issue. Ko Chun-hsiung was a Taiwanese actor, director and politician.

    She served concurrently on the faculty of the Yale Department of Sociology from to , teaching various courses on Korean culture.

    As the first Chair of the Committee on Korean Studies at the Association for Asian Studies, Chair of the Wilson Center Task Force on Korean Studies and advisor of the Korean Studies at the NME, she initiated and led multiple major efforts towards the expansion of Korean Studies.

    Dr.

    Koh has been a pioneer in Korean Culture education both in and beyond the university setting. She founded a teacher�s conference on Korean culture at Yale in with National Endowment for Humanities grant. Now in its tenth year, this conference continues to introduce educators to Korean Studies curriculum development at East Rock Institute.

    In the early s, the Chinese Civil War has ended with the defeat of Republic of China and the establishment of the People's Republic of China by the communists. Soldiers from the 93rd Division of the Republic of China Army take their families with them and leave southwestern China by entering northern Burma Myanmar. The hike through the jungle is full of disasters and shortages of supplies, but the survivors reach and settle within the China—Burma border. They build a village and form an alliance with a local armed gang to resist attacks from the Burmese government. Later, the relocated government of the Republic of China offers to take the soldiers and their families to Taiwan , but some are disappointed with the government and decide to stay.

    To encourage fluency in Korean culture, Hesung also developed an award-winning educational websiteon Korean cultural values.

    In the s, Hesung developed seminars on gender roles before women�s studies were included in University curricula at Albertus and Yale. She was among others the member of Delegates at Large at the U.S. National Conference on Women in , and was a member of the White House Committee Celebrating the UN�s International Women�s Decade.

    Dr.

    Koh has dedicated much of her life to inspiring cross-cultural dialogue. She has authored ten books and nearly a hundred articles, including her bestseller books on "Authentic Leadership" and "Authentic Women�s Leadership" which were translated and published in Tokyo, Taipei and Peking.

    In addition, Hesung developed the cultural information system at HRAF, Yale and ERI with grants from the National Science Foundation (NSF) and Overseas Koreans Foundation (OKF).

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  • Ko Chun-hsiung (January 15, 1945 — December 7, 2015 ...
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  • Ko Chun-hsiung (January 15, 1945 — December 7, 2015 ...
  • Through ERI, she pioneered in studies of Korean diaspora in s and compiled and edited the first comprehensive book on the Korean Diaspora and launched the first and only scholarly journal on Korean and Korean American Studies (). Hesung organized and sponsored many international conferences over the years on the Korean Diaspora, Korean culture through arts (films, music, danc), and authentic traditional clothing, and on the theme of "Diaspora, Design and Globalization: Toward a Virtual Diaspora Museum."

    Hesung continues to serve as a mentor to students and young Korean American professionals at Yale and other colleges through various internships and leadership training programs.

    Dr. Koh has organized and co-sponsored nearly thirty annual conferences since on intergenerational issues affecting both Koreans and Korean American. Through these channels, she has made significant contributions towards shaping the Korean Diaspora identity at both the individual and institutional level.

    Most recently, Hesung published the book "Meaningful Aging" and developed the Cross Cultural Aging Initiative at ERI.

    She received support for the Cross Cultural Aging Initiatives from Changwon and Seoul National Universities, leaders of LeadingAge, the International Association for Home and Services (IAHSA) and the Whitney Center, a retirement community where she and many other retired Yale faculty members currently reside.

    Ko Chun-hsiung (January 15, 1945 — December 7, 2015 ... Ko was born in Kaohsiung. During Taiwan under Japanese rule , he attended Kaohsiung No. John's College, University of Hong Kong. Ko began his career by appearing in small roles before He appeared in The Silent Wife later that year.

    The aim of the project is to include and enhance cultural competency to the current "wellness" model of senior living.

    Hesung continues to teach and live by her mother�s maxim, "Virtue Over Skill," and the ERI motto, "To search, to learn, and to serve." She has dedicated a lifetime to bridging cultural understanding between the East and West, across genders and generations.

    Hesung has done so by combing theory and practice and through her Asian brush painting exhibits.

    She has volunteered at professional, educational and community organizations, churches, ecumenical groups for a number of decades. Her past roles include serving as a member of the Advisory Board of Dickinson College, as an member of the Board of Ordained Ministry of the United Methodist Church, New York Conference as well as US Delegate to UNESCO World Information System as representative from the Social Science Research Council and National Academy of Science/ National Research Council.

    Her passion for knowledge, public service and activism has been recognized through numerous awards in Korea and the United States, including the Order of Civil Merit (the Republic of Korea�s highest award to a civilian) and the Connecticut Governor�s Award.

    Dr.

    Koh is the proud mother of six professional children, eleven grandchildren and four great grandchildren. Hesung has been the mother of the US presidential nominee at three US Senate confirmations.



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