Reading Colonial Korea through Fiction

The Ventriloquists

Reading Colonial Korea through Fiction cover

Reading Colonial Korea through Fiction

The Ventriloquists

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Description

Reading Colonial Korea through Fiction is a compilation of thirteen original essays which was first serialized in a quarterly issued by the National Institute of Korean Language, Saekukosaenghwal (Living our National Language Anew) in a column entitled, “Our Fiction, Our Language” between 2004 to 2007. Although the original intent of the Institute was to elucidate on important features particular to “national fiction” and the superiority of “national language,” instead Kim Chul’s astute essays offers a completely different reading of how national literature and language was constructed. Through a series of culturally nuanced readings, Kim links the formation and origins of Korean language and fiction to modernity and traces its origins to the Japanese colonial period while demonstrating in a very lucid way how colonialism constitutes modernity and how all modernity is perforce colonial, given the imperial crucibles from which modernist claims emerged. For Kim, denying this reality can only lead to violent distortions as he eschews appeals to a preexisting framework, preferring instead to ground his theoretical insights in subtle, innovative readings of texts themselves.

Table of Contents

Preface, Kim Chul
Note on Romanization
Foreword, Theodore Jun Yoo
Chapter 1: Yo-dokari Tablet: The “Modernity” of Korean Language
Chapter 2: “Oily touches on a canvas, stroking and scattering the pigments”: Train Travel and Korean Fiction
Chapter 3: “No o?? yogi wan?” What Brings you here?”: Korean Fiction and the Standard Language
Chapter 4: “The law is not afraid of yangban, is it?”: Korean Fiction and Modern Law
Chapter 5: “To talk it over in English”: Korean Fiction and English
Chapter 6: “Love is blind”: Korean Fiction and Eroticism
Chapter 7: “I wish to marry a mainland damsel”: Korean Fiction and the “Mainland-Choson Marriage”
Chapter 8: “She who returned like a return postcard”: Korean Fiction and the Postal System
Chapter 9: Coffee, Purande, Love Candy, and Nanjji: Culinary Lifestyle and Colonial Modernity
Chapter 10: “The agitators are ?ing me”: The Birth of Korean Language
Chapter 11: “Is there any power greater than gold?”: Gold and Korean Fiction
Chapter 12: The Colonial Ventriloquists: Choson Writers Writing in Japanese
Chapter 13: “When they’ve all been stripped naked, no part was good for beating”: Korean Fiction and the August 15 Liberation
Afterword, Theodore Hughes

Product details

Published Mar 15 2018
Format Ebook (Epub & Mobi)
Edition 1st
Extent 140
ISBN 9781498565691
Imprint Lexington Books
Series Critical Studies in Korean Literature and Culture in Translation
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Artist

Kim Chul

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