Joy Kim
Joy Kim is an academic librarian, curator, and renowned authority on Korean Studies librarianship from Los Angeles, California.
Born in the Korean countryside of South Chungcheong Province in 1953, Joy—whose Korean name is Lee Jeong-hyun—grew up in a strictly Confucian household led by her grandfather, whom she describes as a conservative man who believed that women shouldn’t receive an education beyond high school.
Despite this, Joy, who was a voracious reader, applied to attend Ewha Womans University in Seoul, where she studied Library Sciences. While attending university, she met her husband through a friend, though he would soon leave for the United States to study journalism. In time, she later joined him in America, where she found work as a full-time babysitter, learning English by watching television and reading the Bible while her infant clients were asleep.
After only six months, Joy’s English had improved considerably, and in 1980, she enrolled in a graduate program at UCLA to continue her studies in Library Sciences. During her studies, Joy had her first child, and after graduation she began working as a cataloger at the University of Southern California’s East Asian Library.
She was soon named the Curator of USC’s Korean Heritage Library, and under her stewardship, the KHL transformed into one of the premier Korean Studies libraries in North America. Joy’s service to the academic community continued to flourish in her role as the President of the Council on East Asian Libraries—the first Asian woman to hold the appointment. Her work was nationally recognized in 2011 when she was awarded the National Order of Civil Merit by the President of South Korea.
Joy has been instrumental in the archival process of Korean American Story’s Legacy Project within USC’s Korean American Digital Archive. Now retired, Joy enjoys reading, foraging, and spending time with her two daughters.