Ji-Yeon Yuh

Ji-Yeon Yuh is a reporter, writer, editor and professor in Asian American history and Asian diasporas at the Northwestern University.[1] Since 2005, Yuh is the director of Program in Asian American Studies at Northwestern University.[2]

Yuh is a co-founder and National Spokesperson of the organization the Alliance of Scholars Concerned about Korea.

Biography

Yuh studied at Erasmus Society of the Latin School of Chicago in 1983. She received her B.S. in Cognitive Science at Stanford University in 1987; her Ph.D. from the Department of History at University of Pennsylvania in 1999.

Career: from reporting and teaching

After her graduation from Stanford University, Yuh worked as a reporter at The Omaha World-Herald, Omaha, NE from September 1987 to May 1989. Since then she have had several short-term engagements as a reporter with Newsday, New York, NY: from June to September 1987, May 1989 to July 1990. In 1991 from June to September, she was an editorial board member and writer at The Philadelphia Inquirer, Philadelphia, PA.

Upon her graduation from University of Pennsylvania, she started her teaching and research career in Asian American Studies at Northwestern University, and serves as a director at the Asian American Studies Program.

She is the author of book Beyond the Shadow of Camptown: Korean Military Brides in America, which chronicled the history of Korean women who immigrated to the United States as the wives of U.S. soldiers and examines the dynamics of race, culture, gender and nationalism from the perspective of Korean military brides.

Selected publications

Books

Selected Articles

Awards

References

External links


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