Hannah Kim is an associate professor of history and a co-coordinator of the social studies education program at the University of Delaware, Newark.
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Description
List of Illustrations List of Tables Acknowledgments Introduction: From Alien to American 1. The Korean Conspiracy Case, 1911: Mission Work, Imperialism, and an Assassination Plot 2. The Korean Independence Movement, 1919: Korean Expatriates and America's Moral Diplomacy 3. The "Forgotten Country," 1941: Pressing the Case for Korean Independence during Wartime 4. Pied Piper Leads Orphans to the United States, 1955: Evangelical Protestants, the Cold War, and Transracial Adoption from Korea 5. Death in Philadelphia, 1958: The Murder of In-Ho Oh and the Politics of Cold War America Epilogue: A Korean American Community Emerges Notes Bibliography Index
"Ties That Bind takes a novel and interesting approach to a topic that has received little attention. Based on groundbreaking research and eminently readable, it nicely bridges the fields of diplomatic and Asian American history, both of which have been working toward a new Pacific history that integrates transnational and international elements."-Gregg A. Brazinsky, author of Winning the Third World: Sino-American Rivalry during the Cold War

