• Title/Summary/Keyword: 보성전문학교

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A Study on the University and College Libraries Under the Japanese Occupation of Korea (일제강점기 한국 대학 및 전문학교 도서관 현황 연구)

  • Jung, Hae-Sung;Yeo, Ji-Suk
    • Journal of Korean Library and Information Science Society
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    • v.38 no.3
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    • pp.405-423
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    • 2007
  • This study investigated the situation of the Korea University and College libraries under the Japanese Occupation of Korea. Keijo Imperial University Library and Bosung College Library were subsidiary agencies and the other libraries were a section or a department. Keijo Commercial High College Library, Bosung College Library and Soongsil College Library had separate building, and the other college libraries shared a building with other sections or departments in the college. Keijo Imperial University Library had the largest staff and the other libraries had between one and four staff members.

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Tracing the Architectural Origin of the Bosung College Library (1935~37) (보성전문학교 도서관(1935~37)의 건축적 연원 탐구)

  • Kim, Hyon-Sob
    • Journal of architectural history
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    • v.21 no.4
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    • pp.47-58
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    • 2012
  • The purpose of this paper is to trace the architectural origin of the Bosung College Library (1935~37), which is currently used as Graduate School Building of Korea University. So far, numerous books have repeatedly described that the library was modelled on a Duke University library, but without any serious consideration. Through literature review, field-trip and archives investigation, this research discovered new critical facts concerning the origin of the building. First, Dong-Jin Park, the architect for Bosung College, saw a photograph of the Duke library in a Duke University catalog possessed by Chun Suk Auh, Professor of the college at that time. Second, the Duke library that he saw in the catalog, which might possibly be Bulletin of Duke University (Feb. 1931), is certainly the present Perkins Library (1930) in Duke University West Campus. Third, the architect probably referred not only to the library but also to other Duke buildings such as School of Medicine and The Union, of which photographs were also published impressively in the Bulletin. Although the Bosung College Library was inspired by the Duke buildings, however, it is undoubtedly a creative design work by the architect Park. Arguably, these findings broaden our view of Korean architectural history in the modernization period, and it is more than a confirmation of just one building's origin.