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Yi Yuksa

Yi Yuksa scrap

이육사

  • Category

    Poetry

  • Target User

    Adult 성인

  • Period

    Modern 근대

Author Bio 작가 소개

Yi Won-rok (May 18, 1904 – January 16, 1944), better known by his pen name Yi Yuksa, was a Korean poet and independence activist. 

1. Life

Yi was born in Dosan-myeon, Andong on May 18, 1904. Yi was a descendant of the scholar Yi Hwang, better known as Toegye. Yi completed his basic education in Andong, graduating at the age of 15 in 1919. In 1920, at age 17, he moved with his family to Daegu and married. Yi became a teacher at the academy at which he studied, but in 1924 left to attain a university education in Japan.

In 1925, Yi returned to Daegu and along with his brothers and joined the Uiyoldan, an association formed in response to Japanese repression of the Korean Independence Movement. The Uiyoldan was associated with acts of sabotage and assassination. Yi moved to Beijing in 1925 or 26, likely because of this association, and studied at Sun Yat-sen University in Guangzhou. Yi returned to Korea in 1927. When members of the Uiyoldan bombed the Daegu branch of the Choseon Bank, Yi was among those arrested and spent 18 months in prison. There he was assigned the number 264 (yi yuk sa in Korean), which he later adopted as his pen name.

In 1929 Yi began to work as a journalist, and in 1930 he published his first poem, "Mal" (말 Horse), in the Chosun Ilbo. From 1931 to 1933 he studied in China, but continued to work with the Korean resistance. In 1935 he began to concentrate on his writing, publishing both poems and critical essays. 

In April 1943, he went to Beijing and apparently began smuggling weapons into Korea. That same year, Yi returned to Korea on the first anniversary of the death of his mother. He was arrested in Korea, and transferred to Beijing, where he died in prison on January 16, 1944, at the age of 39.  He was cremated and buried in Miari, Seoul.

In 1960, Yi’s remains were reinterred near his birthplace and in 1968 a memorial stone was erected in Andong. Just outside Andong there is the Yi Yuksa Museum, dedicated to the memory of his literature and resistance work.

2. Writing

As one of his country's most famous poets, Yi Yuksa and his works symbolize the spirit of the anti-Japanese resistance of the 1930s and 1940s. While Yi only wrote approximately forty poems, the fact that they have come to represent the resistance spirit of the Korean people against the Japanese colonial government has made his work famous in Korea. In 1939 Yi published his most famous poem, "Cheongpodo" (청포도 Green Grapes). Yi strove to write in the tradition of Korean lyric poetry, among other things writing in Hangul at a time during which this was banned by the Japanese government. Because of Japanese censorship, his writing had to employ symbol and metaphor, never directly commenting on Japanese colonialism or the issues that surrounded it. Nevertheless, his meaning was clear to Koreans, and because of this and his lyricism, his work continues to be included in school textbooks in Korea. After Yi's death, in 1946, his brother published some 20 of his poems. A second edition followed in 1956, and in 1974 an authoritative edition. 

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