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Translations 번역서
English(English)
Black Flower in the Sky
Naoshi Koriyama Elizabeth Ogata ...
Katydid Books2006
Japanese(日本語)
広島のカモメ
古賀博文
葦書房1994
Black flower in the sky poems of a Korean bridegroom in Hiroshima
Katydid Books2000
Related Content 관련 작가
Kim Jun Tae
김준태
Kim Jun Tae (1948—) is a South Korean poet. His poetry generally unfolds in hometowns and rural villages and is an ode to the vitality of nature and the revolutionary power of the people. He became famous for his poem, “Aa gwangjuyeo, urinaraui sipjagayeo” (아아 광주여, 우리나라의 십자가여 Gwangju, Cross of Our Nation) which testified to the horrors of the May 18 Gwangju Democratization Movement. [1] It was published on the front page of the daily regional newspaper and was later translated into both English and Japanese. [2] He is the deputy director of the National Literature Authors Association and the director of the May 18 Memorial Foundation.
Choi Seungbeom
최승범
Choi Seungbeom (1931-) is a South Korean poet who debuted through Hyundae Munhak in 1958 with the poems “Seolgyeong” (설경 Snowscape) and “Sonakbi” (소낙비 Rainshower). Choi focuses on the changes in nature and looks towards a humanistic world in his works, and was awarded the Garam Sijo Literature Prize and the Hwangsan Sijo Literature Prize. •Poetry collection Hujoui norae (후조의 노래 Song of the Migratory Birds) (1968) •Poetry collection Cheonjieseo (천지에서 At Heaven Lake) (1994) •Poetry collection Jayeonui dokbaek (자연의 독백 Nature’s Monologue) (1998)
Eom Won-tae
엄원태
Eom Won-tae, is a South Korean poet. Eom was born in Daegu in 1955. He made a literary debut in 1978, but did not engage in literary activities in earnest until 1990, when he, under the pen name of Eom Won-tae, published “How Come Trees Do Not Fall Even after Death?” (나무는 왜 죽어서도 쓰러지지 않는가 ) and four other poems.
Lee Yonghun
이용훈
Received the “Writer of Tomorrow” New Writers Award in 2018, at the start of their career in writing.
Hong Manjong
홍만종
Hong Manjong (1643-1725), drew upon A Survey of the Geography of Korea and several unauthorized chronicles and compiled the stories in chronological order from the Ancient Joseon Age (2333 B.C.-346) to the Joseon Dynasty (1392-1910).