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America's Man in Korea is the story of America's initial
involvement in Korea as told through the private family letters of
U.S. Navy ensign George Clayton Foulk, Washington's representative
in Seoul in the mid-1880s. "The Hermit Kingdom," as Korea was
known, was no ordinary diplomatic posting at this time. Emerging
from centuries of self-imposed isolation, Korea was struggling to
establish itself as an independent nation amid the imperial
rivalries of China, Japan, England, and Russia; anti-foreign
violence remained a simmering threat; the Korean government was a
hotbed of intrigue and factional strife, its monarch King Kojong
casting about for help. Foulk, fluent in Korean and the foremost
western expert on the country, was an astute observer of this
country's transformation. In his private letters, published here
for the first time, Foulk recounts his struggle to represent the
U.S. and to help Korea in the face of State Department
indifference.
Navy ensign George Foulk made a 900-mile journey through southern
Korea during which he kept a detailed record of everything he
observed and experienced. This travel diary, part of the George
Clayton Foulk collection in the Bancroft Library at the University
of California, Berkeley, has been almost entirely overlooked by
scholars and yet is of inestimable value. First, it is an account
of a trip no Westerner had ever undertaken before or would ever
experience again: a long-distance sedan chair journey in the manner
of a Choson-dynasty government official. Containing his private
thoughts, penned in the heat of the moment, Foulk's diary is
immediate, raw, and honest, laying bare his experience. It gives
readers is a superbly descriptive and perceptive record of Korea.
Inside the Hermit Kingdom stands unique as a firsthand account of
the kingdom of Choson in its pristine condition, before the
intrusion of the outside world.
"BAD ELEPHANT FAR STREAM" A NOVEL "Bad Elephant Far Stream" is an
animal story for adults, a novel about the odyssey of a circus
elephant, told from her own perspective, through her own eyes.
Inspired by the true story of the circus elephant Topsy, the
subject of the 1903 Thomas Edison film "Electrocution of an
Elephant," it begins in the forests of Ceylon in the late 1860s
with the capture of a baby elephant known to her own kind as Far
Stream. She is taken to America chained in a ship, a journey of
several months, and sent to the Adam Forepaugh Circus in
Philadelphia. There, Far Stream embarks on a new life under the big
top, appearing first as "Baby Annie," then, when she grows bigger,
as "Topsy," part of Forepaugh's famed elephant dancing quadrille.
She crisscrosses North America for thirty years with the circus,
experiencing hardships, kidnapping, escapes and adventure. But when
she comes to outweigh her keepers by a factor of forty-it's hard
not to hurt somebody. It's hard not to get labeled as "bad." A
poignant and powerful novel for animal lovers and fans of unusual
historical fiction, "Bad Elephant Far Stream" explores the
questions: What is it like to be an elephant captured and trained
to perform in the circus? What does such an animal think? What does
it feel? What does it yearn for? "Bad Elephant Far Stream" takes
the reader on a voyage of discovery to find out.
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