Korean Patterns.

by Paul S. (Paul Shields) Crane [1919-2005]

Hardcover, 1967

Call number

DS904

Publication

Seoul, Korea: Taewon Publishing Company, 1967.

Physical description

244 p.; 19 cm

Notes

CONTENTS:

Preface.
Introduction.

I. Korean Ideals.

II. The Importance of Kibun.

III. Interpersonal Relationships.
1. Importance of Relationships.
2. Family Relationships.
3. Deference to Elders.
4. Sex and Marriage.
5. Schools and Classmates.

IV. Etiquette.
6. Importance of Etiquette.
7. Introductions.
8. Names and Titles.
9. Privacy and Propriety.
10. Table Manners.
11. Parties.
12. The Problem of Gifts.

V. Public Relationships.
13. Traditional Attitudes toward Government.
14. Attitudes toward the Provinces.
15. Importance of Ceremony.
16. Korean Self-Confidence.
17. Attitudes toward Crime and Criminals.
18. Attitudes while under Duress.
19. Business Attitudes.

VI. Han Yak. The Practice of Ancient Medicine.

VII. Modernized Koreans.
20. Koreans Today.
21. Impact of Study and Travel on Korean Attitudes.
22. Imprint of Japanese Occupation on Korean Patterns.
23. Reactions to American Forces.
24. Christianity in Korea.
25. Impact of Christianity on Traditional Korean Attitudes.
26. Some Attitudes of Korean Christians.
27. The Westerner Working in Korea.

Appendix
Korean Proverbs.
The Lunar Calendar.
A Sixty-Year Cycle.
Fortune Telling.
Special Days of the Lunar Calendar.
Official Korean Commemorative Days and Official Holidays.
Terms Used to Denote Family Relationships.
Korean Wild Flowers Used in Han Yak Prescriptions.
The Hangûl Alphabet.
McCune-Reischauer System for the Romanization of Korean.

VIII. Conclusion.

Two collections of the Papers of Dr. Paul S. Crane have been located, the one Davidson College, in Davidson, North Carolina - https://findingaids.davidson.edu/repositories/3/resources/872
and the other at the Presbyterian Historical Society, in Philadelphia - https://www.history.pcusa.org/collections/research-tools/guides-archival-collect...

Barcode

005a165010

Language

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