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Paperback

Azalea 15

$112.99
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This volume of Azalea contains two special features and an images section: Contemporary Korean LGBTQ + Literature, Voices from Colonial Korea, and images by Kang Seung Lee.

A century's worth of change looks quite remarkable in Korean literature. Today's young Koreans cannot read the same newspapers read by their grandparents' generation. In less than a hundred years, the national written language has shifted from Chinese characters to Korean hangul, then briefly to Japanese as enforced under colonial rule, and then to the modern Korean language that we know today. During this process, remarkable sociocultural transformations dominated daily life. Over the first half of the 20th century, Koreans endured enormous political shifts most notably marked by colonization, the Korean War, and the ensuing divide of the country into separate political nations. Along the way, Korean literature registered these upheavals and fluctuations.

Notably, the literature of totalizing grand narrative, which concerned itself with the trajectory of nation-building, persisted in Korea until the 1980s. Ever since the end of the military dictatorship and the establishment of a civil government in the 1990s, however, that literature began to shift its focus to the lives of women. Now, those long ignored and marginalized-including queer women, as well as other queer people such as those who are non-binary- have also begun to emerge more strongly as published authors, even as they have been increasingly centered as subjects of literary narratives. The ongoing impact of this inclusive, expansionary shift can be seen directly in AZALEA's decision to focus on LGBTQ+ literature for its fifteenth issue.

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Harvard University, Korea Institute
Country
United States
Date
31 January 2023
Pages
392
ISBN
9780999313831

This volume of Azalea contains two special features and an images section: Contemporary Korean LGBTQ + Literature, Voices from Colonial Korea, and images by Kang Seung Lee.

A century's worth of change looks quite remarkable in Korean literature. Today's young Koreans cannot read the same newspapers read by their grandparents' generation. In less than a hundred years, the national written language has shifted from Chinese characters to Korean hangul, then briefly to Japanese as enforced under colonial rule, and then to the modern Korean language that we know today. During this process, remarkable sociocultural transformations dominated daily life. Over the first half of the 20th century, Koreans endured enormous political shifts most notably marked by colonization, the Korean War, and the ensuing divide of the country into separate political nations. Along the way, Korean literature registered these upheavals and fluctuations.

Notably, the literature of totalizing grand narrative, which concerned itself with the trajectory of nation-building, persisted in Korea until the 1980s. Ever since the end of the military dictatorship and the establishment of a civil government in the 1990s, however, that literature began to shift its focus to the lives of women. Now, those long ignored and marginalized-including queer women, as well as other queer people such as those who are non-binary- have also begun to emerge more strongly as published authors, even as they have been increasingly centered as subjects of literary narratives. The ongoing impact of this inclusive, expansionary shift can be seen directly in AZALEA's decision to focus on LGBTQ+ literature for its fifteenth issue.

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Harvard University, Korea Institute
Country
United States
Date
31 January 2023
Pages
392
ISBN
9780999313831