K. Connie Kang

http://dbpedia.org/resource/K._Connie_Kang an entity of type: Thing

K. Connie Kang (born Kyonshill Kang; November 11, 1942 – August 16, 2019) was a Korean American journalist and author. Born in what would become North Korea, Connie and her Christian family fled first to South Korea and then to Japan to escape religious persecution in the 1940s and 50s. They later immigrated to the United States and settled in San Francisco. Connie studied journalism at the University of Missouri and Northwestern University and began her formal journalism career in 1964, credited as being the first female Korean American reporter. rdf:langString
rdf:langString K. Connie Kang
rdf:langString K. Connie Kang
rdf:langString K. Connie Kang
xsd:date 2019-08-16
rdf:langString Hamheung, Korea
xsd:date 1942-11-11
xsd:integer 66152834
xsd:integer 1120576057
rdf:langString Colma, California, United States
xsd:date 1942-11-11
rdf:langString Kyonshill Kang
xsd:date 2019-08-16
rdf:langString Korean, American
rdf:langString Home Was the Land of Morning Calm: A Saga of a Korean-American Family
rdf:langString Journalist, author
rdf:langString K. Connie Kang (born Kyonshill Kang; November 11, 1942 – August 16, 2019) was a Korean American journalist and author. Born in what would become North Korea, Connie and her Christian family fled first to South Korea and then to Japan to escape religious persecution in the 1940s and 50s. They later immigrated to the United States and settled in San Francisco. Connie studied journalism at the University of Missouri and Northwestern University and began her formal journalism career in 1964, credited as being the first female Korean American reporter. During the early 1980s, Connie Kang co-founded the Korean American Journalists Association. In early 1992, riots in Los Angeles resulted in heavy property damage to Korean American neighbourhoods, and the widespread lack of Korean-speaking reporters meant that local media struggled to accurately cover the ongoing events. Connie was subsequently hired at the Los Angeles Times, where she developed some of the first mainstream media coverage of Korean American communities and their stories. Connie accumulated more than 30 professional awards for her work covering the California Supreme Court system, and her reporting career spanned both American and Asian publications. In 1995, she published a memoir entitled Home Was the Land of Morning Calm: A Saga of a Korean-American Family. She was awarded a lifetime achievement award by the Asian American Journalists Association in 1997.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 11909
rdf:langString Kyonshill Kang
xsd:gYear 1942
xsd:gYear 2019

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