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Echo/e—Han Kang

Han Kang - The Nobel Prize in Literature 2024

by e-bluespirit 2024. 10. 24.

Ill. Niklas Elmehed © Nobel Prize Outreach

Han Kang
The Nobel Prize in Literature 2024

Born: 27 November 1970, Gwangju, South Korea

Residence at the time of the award: Seoul, South Korea

Prize motivation: “for her intense poetic prose that confronts historical traumas and exposes the fragility of human life”

Language: Korean

Prize share: 1/1

 

The Nobel Prize in Literature 2024 was awarded to Han Kang "for her intense poetic prose that confronts historical traumas and exposes the fragility of human life"

 

Han Kang began her career in 1993 as a poet, but has since written mainly novels and short stories. In her oeuvre, she confronts historical traumas and invisible sets of rules and, in each of her works, exposes the fragility of human life. She has a unique awareness of the connections between body and soul, the living and the dead, and in her poetic and experimental style has become an innovator in contemporary prose. Among her works are The Vegetarian, Human Acts and We Do Not Part.

 

 

 

Biobibliography

Navigate to:   Summary- Han Kang Prize announcement Press release Bio-bibliographyEnglish
English [pdf]
Swedish
Swedish [pdf]

 

Press release
10 October 2024

The Nobel Prize in Literature 2024

Han Kang

The Nobel Prize in Literature for 2024 is awarded to the South Korean author Han Kang,

“for her intense poetic prose that confronts historical traumas and exposes the fragility of human life”.

 

한강 Han Kang was born in 1970 in the South Korean city of Gwangju before, at the age of nine, moving with her family to Seoul. She comes from a literary background, her father being a reputed novelist. Alongside her writing, she has also devoted herself to art and music, which is reflected throughout her entire literary production.

 

Han Kang began her career in 1993 with the publication of a number of poems in the magazine 문학과사회 (“Literature and Society”). Her prose debut came in 1995 with the short story collection 여수의 사랑 (“Love of Yeosu”), followed soon afterwards by several other prose works, both novels and short stories. Notable among these is the novel 그대의 차가운  (2002; “Your Cold Hands”), which bears obvious traces of Han Kang’s interest in art. The book reproduces a manuscript left behind by a missing sculptor who is obsessed with making plaster casts of female bodies. There is a preoccupation with the human anatomy and the play between persona and experience, where a conflict arises in the work of the sculptor between what the body reveals and what it conceals. ‘Life is a sheet arching over an abyss, and we live above it like masked acrobats’ as a sentence towards the end of the book tellingly asserts.

 

Han Kang’s major international breakthrough came with the novel 채식주의자 (2007; The Vegetarian, 2015). Written in three parts, the book portrays the violent consequences that ensue when its protagonist Yeong-hye refuses to submit to the norms of food intake. Her decision not to eat meat is met with various, entirely different reactions. Her behaviour is forcibly rejected by both her husband and her authoritarian father, and she is exploited erotically and aesthetically by her brother-in-law, a video artist who becomes obsessed with her passive body. Ultimately, she is committed to a psychiatric clinic, where her sister attempts to rescue her and bring her back to a ‘normal’ life. However, Yeong-hye sinks ever deeper into a psychosis-like condition expressed through the ‘flaming trees’, a symbol for a plant kingdom that is as enticing as it is dangerous.

 

A more plot-based book is 바람이 분다, 가라 (“The Wind Blows, Go”) from 2010, a large and complex novel about friendship and artistry, in which grief and a longing for transformation are strongly present.

Han Kang’s physical empathy for extreme life stories is reinforced by her increasingly charged metaphorical style. 희랍어 시간 (Greek Lessons, 2023) from 2011 is a captivating portrayal of an extraordinary relationship between two vulnerable individuals. A young woman who, following a string of traumatic experiences, has lost the power of speech connects with her teacher in Ancient Greek, who is himself losing his sight. From their respective flaws, a brittle love affair develops. The book is a beautiful meditation around loss, intimacy and the ultimate conditions of language.

 

In the novel 소년이 온다 (2014; Human Acts, 2016), Han Kang this time employs as her political foundation a historical event that took place in the city of Gwangju, where she herself grew up and where hundreds of students and unarmed civilians were murdered during a massacre carried out by the South Korean military in 1980. In seeking to give voice to the victims of history, the book confronts this episode with brutal actualization and, in so doing, approaches the genre of witness literature. Han Kang’s style, as visionary as it is succinct, nevertheless deviates from our expectations of that genre, and it is a particular expedient of hers to permit the souls of the dead to be separated from their bodies, thus allowing them to witness their own annihilation. In certain moments, at the sight of the unidentifiable corpses that cannot be buried, the text harks back to the basic motif of Sophocles’s Antigone.

 

In 흰 (2016; The White Book, 2017), Han Kang’s poetic style once again dominates. The book is an elegy dedicated to the person who could have been the narrative self’s elder sister, but who passed away only a couple of hours after birth. In a sequence of short notes, all concerning white objects, it is through this colour of grief that the work as a whole is associatively constructed. This renders it less a novel and more a kind of ‘secular prayer book’, as it has also been described. If, the narrator reasons, the imaginary sister had been allowed to live, she herself would not have been permitted to come into being. It is also in addressing the dead that the book reaches its final words: ‘Within that white, all of those white things, I will breathe in the final breath you released.’

 

Another highlight is the late work, 작별하지 않는다 (“We Do Not Part”) from 2021, which in terms of its imagery of pain is closely connected to The White Book. The story unfolds in the shadow of a massacre that took place in the late 1940s on South Korea’s Jeju Island, where tens of thousands of people, among them children and the elderly, were shot on suspicion of being collaborators. The book portrays the shared mourning process undertaken by the narrator and her friend Inseon, who both, long after the event, bear with them the trauma associated with the disaster that has befallen their relatives. With imagery that is as precise as it is condensed, Han Kang not only conveys the power of the past over the present, but also, equally powerfully, traces the friends’ unyielding attempts to bring to light what has fallen into collective oblivion and transform their trauma into a joint art project, which lends the book its title. As much about the deepest form of friendship as it is about inherited pain, the book moves with great originality between the nightmarish images of the dream and the inclination of witness literature to speak the truth.

 

Han Kang’s work is characterized by this double exposure of pain, a correspondence between mental and physical torment with close connections to Eastern thinking. In 회복 하는 인간 = Convalescence from 2013, this involves a leg ulcer that refuses to heal and a painful relationship between the main character and her dead sister. No true convalescence ever actually takes place, and the pain emerges as a fundamental existential experience that cannot be reduced to any passing torment. In a novel such as The Vegetarian, no simple explanations are provided. Here, the deviant act occurs suddenly and explosively in the form of a blank refusal, with the protagonist remaining silent. The same can be said of the short story 에우로파 (2012; Europa, 2019), in which the male narrator, himself masked as a woman, is drawn to an enigmatic woman who has broken away from an impossible marriage. The narrative self remains silent when asked by his beloved: ‘If you were able to live as you desire, what would you do with your life?’ There is no room here for either fulfillment or atonement.

 

In her oeuvre, Han Kang confronts historical traumas and invisible sets of rules and, in each of her works, exposes the fragility of human life. She has a unique awareness of the connections between body and soul, the living and the dead, and in her poetic and experimental style has become an innovator in contemporary prose.

Anders Olsson
Chairman of the Nobel Committee

Bibliography – a selection

Works in Korean

여수의 사랑. – 서울 : 문학과지성사, 1995  [“Love of Yeosu”. Short stories.]

검은 사슴. – 경기도 파주시 : 문학 동네, 1998  [“Black Deer”. Novel.]

아기 부처. – 인천 : 개미, 1999  [“Baby Buddha”. Novella.]

내 여자의 열매. – 서울 : 창작 과 비평사, 2000  [“Fruits of My Woman”. Short stories.]

그대의 차가운 손. – 서울 : 문학과지성사, 2002  [“Your Cold Hands”. Novel.]

내 이름은 태양꽃 / 한강 동화 ; 김세현 그림. – 경기도 파주시 : 문학 동네, 2002  [“My Name is Sun Flower” / Han Kang, fairy tale ; Kim Se-Hyeon, picture, 2002. Novella.]

붉은 꽃 이야기 / 지은이: 한강 ; 그린이: 우승우. – 서울 : 열림원, 2003  [“The Story of the Red Flower” / author: Han Kang ; illustrator: Woo Seung-woo. Novella.]

사랑과, 사랑을 둘러싼 것들. – 서울 : 열림원, 2003  [“Love and Things Surrounding Love”. Essays.]

 가만가만 부르는 노래. – 서울 : 비채, 2007  [“Quietly Sung Songs”. Essays.]

천둥 꼬마 선녀 번개 꼬마 선녀 / 한강 글; 진선미 그림. – 경기도 파주시 : 문학 동네, 2007  [“Thunder Little Fairy Lightning Little Fairy” / written by Han Kang ; Jin Seon-mi, picture. Children’s book.]

채식주의자. – 경기도 파주시 : 창비, 2007  [The Vegetarian. Novel.]

눈물상자 / 한강 글 ; 봄로야 그림. – 경기도 파주시 : 문학 동네, 2008  [“Tear Basket” / written by Han Kang ; Bomroya, picture. Short stories.]

바람이 분다, 가라. – 서울 : 문학 과 지성사, 2010  [“The Wind Blows, Go”. Novel.]

희랍어 시간. – 경기도 파주시 : 문학 동네, 2011  [Greek Lessons. Novel.]

노랑무늬영원. – 서울 : 문학 과 지성사, 2012  [“Fire Salamander”. Short stories.]

서랍 에 저녁 을 넣어 두었다. – 서울 : 문학 과 지성사, 2013  [“I Put The Evening in the Drawer”. Poetry.]

회복 하는 인간 / 지은이 한 강 ; 옮긴이 전 승희 = Convalescence / written by Han Kang ; translated by Jeon Seung-hee. – 서울 : 아시아, 2013  [Bilingual edition. Novella.]

소년이 온다. – 경기도 파주시 : 창비, 2014  [Human Acts. Novel.]

흰. – 경기도 파주시 : 문학 동네, 2016  [The White Book. Novel.]

작별하지 않는다. – 경기도 파주시 : 문학 동네, 2021  [“We do not part”. Novel.]

한 강. – 경기도 파주시 : 문학 동네, 2022  [“Han Kang”. Series: The Essential. Collection.]

Film

Vegetarian, 2009. Directed by Lim Woo-Seong ; screenplay by Lim Woo-Seong. Based on the novel The Vegetarian by Han Kang.

Scars, 2011. Directed by Lim Woo-Seong; screenplay by Lim Woo-Seong and Han Kang. Based on the novella ”Baby Buddha” by Han Kang.

Works in Swedish

Vegetarianen / översättning från engelskan av Eva Johansson. – Stockholm : Natur & Kultur, 2016. – Originaltitel: 채식주의자

Levande och döda / översättning från engelskan av Eva Johansson. – Stockholm : Natur & Kultur, 2016. – Originaltitel: 소년이 온다

Den vita boken / översättning från koreanskan av Anders Karlsson och Okkyoung Park. – Stockholm : Natur & Kultur, 2019. – Originaltitel: 흰

Jag tar inte farväl : roman / översättning från koreanskan av Anders Karlsson och Okkyoung Park. – Stockholm : Natur & Kultur, 2024. – Originaltitel: 작별하지 않는다

Works in English

회복 하는 인간 / 지은이 한 강 ; 옮긴이 전 승희 = Convalescence / written by Han Kang ; translated from the Korean by Jeon Seung-Hee. [Bilingual edition]. – Seoul : Asia, 2013

The Vegetarian : a novel / translated from the Korean by Deborah Smith. – London : Hogarth, 2015. – Translation of: 채식주의자

Human Acts : a novel / translated from the Korean and introduced by Deborah Smith. – London : Portobello Books, 2016. – Translation of: 소년이 온다

The White Book / translated from the Korean by Deborah Smith. – London : Portobello Books, 2017. – Translation of: 흰

Europa / translated from the Korean by Deborah Smith. – Norwich : Strangers Press, part of the UEA Publishing Project, 2019. – Translation of: 에우로파 in 노랑무늬영원

Greek Lessons / translated from the Korean by Deborah Smith and Emily Yae Won. – London : Hogarth, 2023. – Translation of: 희랍어 시간

 

Anthology:

”Nostalgic Journey” (1994) in Unspoken voices : Selected Short Stories by Korean Women Writers / compiled and translated from the Korean by Jin-Young Choi. – Dumont, N.J. : Homa & Sekey Books, 2002. – Translation of short story in “Love of Yeosu”; 여수의 사랑

Works in French

Pars, le vent se lève : roman / traduit du coréen par Lee Tae-yeon et Geneviève Roux-Faucard. – Fuveau : Decrescenzo, 2014. – Traduction de: 바람이 분다, 가라

La végétarienne : roman / traduit du coréen par Jeong Eun-Jin et Jacques Batilliot. – La Tour d’Aigues : Serpent à Plumes, 2015. – Traduction de: 채식주의자

Celui qui revient : roman / traduit du coréen par Jeong Eun-Jin et Jacques Batilliot. – La Tour d’Aigues : Serpent à Plumes, 2016. – Traduction de: 소년이 온다

Leçons de grec : roman / traduit du coréen par Jeong Eun-Jin et Jacques Batilliot. – La Tour d’Aigues : Serpent à Plumes, 2017. – Traduction de: 희랍어 시간

Blanc : roman / traduit du coréen par Jeong Eun-Jin et Jacques Batilliot. – La Tour d’Aigues : Serpent à Plumes, 2018. – Traduction de: 흰

Impossibles adieux : roman / traduit du coréen par Kyungran Choi et Pierre Bisiou. – Bernard Grasset, 2023. – Traduction de: 작별하지 않는다

Anthologie:

”Les Chiens au soleil couchant” in Cocktail Sugar et autres nouvelles de Corée / traduction sous la direction de Choi Mikyung et Jean-Noël Juttet. – Paris : Zulma, 2011. – Traduction de: 해질녘에 개들은 어떤 기분일까 dans 내 여자의 열매

Works in German

Die Vegetarierin : Roman / aus dem Koreanischen von Ki-Hyang Lee [I Gi hyang]. – Berlin : Aufbau, 2016. – Originaltitel: 채식주의자

Menschenwerk : Roman / aus dem Koreanischen von I Gi hyang. – Berlin : Aufbau, 2017. – Originaltitel: 소년이 온다

 

Deine kalten Hände : Roman / aus dem Koreanischen von Kyong-Hae Flügel. – Berlin : Aufbau, 2019. – Originaltitel: 그대의 차가운 손

Weiß =흰 / aus dem Koreanischen von I Gi hyang. – Berlin : Aufbau, 2020. – Originaltitel: 흰

Griechischstunden : Roman / aus dem Koreanischen von I Gi hyang. – Berlin : Aufbau, 2024. – Originaltitel: 희랍어 시간

Anthologie:

“Die Früchte meiner Frau” in Koreanische Erzählungen / hrsg. von Sylvia Bräsel und Lie Kwang-Sook. Mit einem Nachw. von Sylvia Bräsel. – München : Dt. Taschenbuch-Verl., 2005. – Originaltitel: 내 여자의 열매

 

 

 

 

https://han-kang.net/

https://han-kang.net/Nav-Books

https://han-kang.net/Visual-Arts

https://han-kang.net/Text-1

https://han-kang.net/Sound

https://han-kang.net/Media

https://namu.wiki/w/%ED%95%9C%EA%B0%95(%EC%86%8C%EC%84%A4%EA%B0%80)

https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%ED%95%9C%EA%B0%95_(%EC%9E%91%EA%B0%80)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Han_Kang

https://www.nobelprize.org/prizes/literature/2024/summary/