King Kwong Wong

PhD Student
Research Area

About

King Kwong Wong is a cultural, intellectual, and political historian of premodern and early modern Korea and China and is currently pursuing his Ph.D. degree in the Department of Asian Studies at the University of British Columbia. His research has centered on conceptualizations of sovereignty and interstate relations by examining how Korean and Chinese elites thought about these ideas in their history writing compilations of history from the thirteenth to eighteenth centuries. He is also interested in cultural, intellectual, personnel, and material exchanges between premodern Korea and China. His work has appeared in the Seoul Journal of Korean Studies, The Chinese History Podcast, and The Kordocs Project.


King Kwong Wong

PhD Student
Research Area

About

King Kwong Wong is a cultural, intellectual, and political historian of premodern and early modern Korea and China and is currently pursuing his Ph.D. degree in the Department of Asian Studies at the University of British Columbia. His research has centered on conceptualizations of sovereignty and interstate relations by examining how Korean and Chinese elites thought about these ideas in their history writing compilations of history from the thirteenth to eighteenth centuries. He is also interested in cultural, intellectual, personnel, and material exchanges between premodern Korea and China. His work has appeared in the Seoul Journal of Korean Studies, The Chinese History Podcast, and The Kordocs Project.


King Kwong Wong

PhD Student
Research Area
About keyboard_arrow_down

King Kwong Wong is a cultural, intellectual, and political historian of premodern and early modern Korea and China and is currently pursuing his Ph.D. degree in the Department of Asian Studies at the University of British Columbia. His research has centered on conceptualizations of sovereignty and interstate relations by examining how Korean and Chinese elites thought about these ideas in their history writing compilations of history from the thirteenth to eighteenth centuries. He is also interested in cultural, intellectual, personnel, and material exchanges between premodern Korea and China. His work has appeared in the Seoul Journal of Korean Studies, The Chinese History Podcast, and The Kordocs Project.