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Jinsung Kim - Between the Pillar of State and Social Stigma: The Military Exile Practice in Chosŏn Korea, 1863–1894

Jinsung Kim - Between the Pillar of State and Social Stigma: The Military Exile Practice in Chosŏn Korea, 1863–1894

Presented by Jinsung Kim, Lecturer, University of British Columbia

This Zoom event will take place on April 3, 3:00 pm (Vancouver Time) / 6:00 pm (New York Time) / April 4, 7:00 am (Seoul Time).

Please register: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/iyH4YTTdSO2Zo1srOEkGzw

Abstract

In the late nineteenth century, the Chosŏn government under King Kojong pursued military strengthening in response to growing threats from Western powers. Existing scholarship has often interpreted these efforts as evidence of a fundamental transformation of the military system. However, the regime simultaneously relied on military exile (ch’unggun 充軍), a conventional punitive practice that required offenders to perform compulsory military service. This apparent contradiction raises important questions about the nature of military reform and the role of punishment in late Chosŏn society.

This talk examines military exile during King Kojong’s reign (1863-1894). Through an analysis of its historical origins, legal foundations, and modes of enforcement, it argues that Chosŏn policymakers continued to hold a devalued view of the military. This perspective reflected long-standing elite attitudes toward military service that persisted despite official reform agendas aimed at strengthening military capacity and elevating the status of military officials. The resulting tension between formal state policy and elite practice, this lecture contends, contributed to the incomplete and uneven character of military reform in late nineteenth-century Chosŏn.

About the Presenter

Jinsung Kim is a Sessional Lecturer in the Department of Asian Studies at the University of British Columbia. He earned his Ph.D. in Asian Studies at UBC in 2025. His research examines Korea’s military reform and its complex interactions with China, Japan, and the United States in the late 19th century. Before pursuing his doctorate, he completed an M.A. in History at Sungkyunkwan University in South Korea, where he specialized in Sino-Korean relations between 1882 and 1884.

About the Moderator

Kunha Kim is a Research Professor at Sogang University specializing in late Chosŏn military and fiscal history. Trained as a historian of Chosŏn Korea, he works at the intersection of traditional archival research and digital history, applying quantitative analysis, GIS, and AI-based methods to premodern sources. His recent projects focus on long-term changes in military conscription and taxation systems, exploring how state structures and regional burdens evolved over time.

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