Cho Se-hui

Cho Se-hui
Born (1942-08-20) 20 August 1942
Language Korean
Nationality South Korean
Ethnicity Korean
Citizenship South Korean
Notable works The Dwarf
Cho Se-hui
Hangul 조세희
Hanja 趙世熙
Revised Romanization Jo Sehui
McCune–Reischauer Cho Sehŭi
This is a Korean name; the family name is Cho.

Cho Se-hui is a Korean author.[1]

Life

Cho Sehui was born on 20 August 1942, in Gapyeong, Gyeonggi-do. Cho attended Seorabeol Art College and Kyonggi University in Seoul.[2] Cho was a member of the so-called "hangul generation," which was called that because its member were the first to be educated in the Korean language (the previous years had been under Japanese domination and language, and before the colonial period most scholars had studied Chinese).

Work

Cho's writing is sparse and explicit, though it can also seem surreal. His most famous work is The Dwarf. The Dwarf is a yŏnjak sosŏl (linked novel) or collection of separately published short stories which can stand alone or supplement each other. This fractured structure, along with Cho's jump-cutting, juxtapositional, and un-sign-posted narrative portrays a society that "severs men from the natural rhythms and shape of creation."[3]

It is a powerful work of social criticism focusing on the forced redevelopment of Seoul in the 1970s, and the human costs that accompanied it. It combines biting realism with an often fantastic structure that pulls a reader into the difficult and fragmented era the work describes. Cho combines a kaleidoscopic narrative approach, powerful use of scientific symbols, and a dead-flat and deadeye narrative tone. Reading The Dwarf requires some attention, but the interlocking narrative arcs and often disconcerting internal shifts in narrator or time frame are both supportive of the theme of the book and ultimately rewarding. Koreans consider this work to be one of the critical works of the 1970s.[4]

Works in Translation

Works in Korean

Awards

References

  1. "조세희 " biographical PDF available at: http://klti.or.kr/ke_04_03_011.do#
  2. Kenneth M. Wells, South Korea's minjung movement: the culture and politics of dissidence University of Hawaii at Manoa. Center for Korean Studies p. 214
  3. Lukács, Realism in Our Time
  4. Peter H. Lee, ed. A History of Korean Literature. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (2003), p. 477.

External links

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