Ross King | |
|---|---|
| Occupations | Professor of Korean Language and Literature |
| Academic background | |
| Education |
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| Academic work | |
| Discipline | Linguistics of Korean |
| Institutions | University of British Columbia |
Julian Ross Paul King[1] (born 25 February 1961), commonlyRoss King, is a Canadian linguist andKoreanist. He is a Professor of Korean Language and Literature at theUniversity of British Columbia. Previously, he was head of the Department of Asian Studies there from 1 July 2008 to 30 June 2020.[2][3]
King's parents emigrated fromEngland to the United States in 1957. He grew up inWisconsin.[4] King attended theConcordia Language Villages from ages 10 to 18.[5] He graduated fromPhillips Exeter Academy in 1979.[2] King first became interested in the Korean language during his second year of undergraduate studies atYale University. He first visited South Korea in 1981. King claims to be self-taught in the language; at the time, there was a lack of good textbooks on Korean and Yale did not offer Korean language courses.[6] He received his Bachelor of Arts in Linguistics and Political Science from Yale in 1983. He received his Master of Arts and PhD in Linguistics fromHarvard University in 1986 and 1991 respectively.[7]
King is a researcher in Korean historical linguistics, Korean dialectology (especiallyKoryo-mar, the dialect ofKoryo-saram),[8] and literary culture in theSinographic Sphere.[9] In 2022, he spent a year as a visiting scholar atSungkyunkwan University in South Korea.[10]
King is also a vocal advocate for greater South Korean private and public investment in international language learning of Korean, in order to capitalize on and sustain the success of theKorean Wave.[11][12] In 1999, he establishedSup sogŭi Hosu, or the Korean Language Village, inMinnesota, United States, to encourage Korean language immersion.[13][14] In 2015, he and John Duncan jointly established the Inter-University Center for Korean Language Studies (IUC;국제한국학센터) atSungkyunkwan University inSeoul, South Korea. The program is partnered a number of universities, such as Harvard and theUniversity of California, Los Angeles, and provides training and resources for Korea-related academic research.[15][16][17] In 2018, he took over as editor-in-chief of theSungkyun Journal of East Asian Studies from Boudewijn Walraven.[18]
King has received a number of awards for his contributions to the linguistics of Korean and Korean language education. In 2000, he received a commendation from thePrime Minister of South Korea.[19][20] In 2022, he was given theOesol Award (외솔상), which was named for the Korean linguistChoe Hyeon-bae (whoseart name was Oesol).[10] In 2025, he and his former PhD studentDafna Zur[21] jointly received theManhae Prize.[22]
King has studied and academically written about a number of different languages. Besides English, he has studied French, German, Russian, Spanish, Japanese, Chinese, and Korean.[10][23] He is married to a South Korean woman, whom he met at Harvard.[13][20]