Charles King Armstrong is an antiquarian and the
Korea Foundation Professor of Korean Studies in the Social Sciences at Columbia
University. His works manage insurgencies, Asia-Pacific wars, culture of
communism, compositional history, and conciliatory history with regards to East
Asia, current Korea, and North Korea.
Armstrong earned B.A. at Yale University in
1984; and afterward he proceeded with his investigations at Yonsei University
in Seoul, gaining a recognition in Korean language in 1986. In the wake of
accepting a M.Sc. at the London School of Economics in 1988, he was granted a
Ph.D. at the University of Chicago in 1994.
Charles Armstrong is the Korea Foundation
Professor of Korean Studies in the Social Sciences in the Department of History
and the Director of The Center for Korean Research. An expert in the cutting
edge history of Korea and East Asia, Professor Armstrong has composed or
altered various books on present day and contemporary Korea. Armstrong's work
has been generally refered to and read and is established in his comprehension
of the caught reports accumulation at the U.S. National Archives, following in
the strides of his coach Bruce Cumings. He is viewed as a powerful figure in
Korean Studies and an innovator in grant on North Korea.
He joined the Columbia personnel in 1996 and
shows seminars on Korean history, U.S.- East Asian relations, the Vietnam War,
and ways to deal with universal and worldwide history. He remains an incessant
reporter in the U.S. furthermore, remote broad communications on contemporary
Korean, East Asian, and Asian-American affairs. He was a Visiting Professor in
2008 at the Graduate School of International Studies at Seoul National
University, and has given keynote addresses at significant Asian investigations
gatherings.

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