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이응준

Lee Eung Jun scrap

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이응준

  • Category

    Literary Fiction 소설

  • Target User

    Adult 성인

  • Period

    Contemporary 현대

Author Bio 작가 소개

Lee Eung Jun (b.1970) is a poet and novelist. He first published a poem in the quarterly journal Literature & Criticism in 1990, and debuted as a novelist in 1994 when his short story appeared in the quarterly magazine Imagination. His published works include the poetry collection The Trees Rejected the Forest; a short story collection titled My Girlfriend’s Funeral; the novels Private Life of the Nation and All About My Romance; and the serialized novel Night Cello. Lemon Tree is a 40-minute long film written and directed by Lee that screened at the New York Asian American International Film Festival and at the Paris International Short Film Festival in 2008.

1. Life

Lee Eung Jun was born in Seoul, South Korea in 1970. He earned his bachelor’s and master’s degrees in German literature and doctoral degree in Korean literature at Hanyang University. He made his literary debut in 1990 when “Kkaedareumeun gapjagi chajaonda” (깨달음은 갑자기 찾아온다 Epiphanies Come Without Warning) and nine other poems were published in the winter issue of the journal Literature & Criticism. His first work of fiction was “Geuneun chueogui sokdoro georeogatda” (그는 추억의 속도로 걸아갔다 He Walked at the Speed of Memory), a short story published in the fall 1994 issue of the journal Imagination.

Lee, who began his literary career at the age of 25, spent most of his twenties in a hospital ward taking care of his mother who was fighting cancer. In his autobiographical short story “Ororareul bora” (오로라를 보라 Behold the Aurora), he writes that “obscene books and the smell of moldy blankets festered his heart at the age of twenty-seven” and that “the struggles of looking after a terminal cancer patient was less frustrating than having to write trapped in a ward.”

Apart from writing poetry and fiction, Lee wrote and directed Lemon Tree, a 40-minute film that screened at the New York Asian American International Film Festival and Paris International Short Film Festival. His novel Nae Yeonaeui modeun geot (내 연애의 모든 것 All About My Romance), which centers around an unlikely romance between two members of the South Korean National Assembly who belong to opposite sides of the political spectrum, has been adapted into a TV show.

2. Writing

In the preface to his novel Sonyeoneul wuihan sarangui haeseok (소년을 위한 사랑의 해석 An Interpretation of Love for Boys), Lee writes:

“What is fiction? As literature is my religion, this question is a catechism to me. If someone asked me that same question, I’d answer: fiction is a story about people, and a story about people describes how they fall in and out of love. They love without knowing what love is and sometimes even burn life away because of it. But they grow as they embrace the chaos of love and sing. I like to think of all such people as ‘boys,’ and it is with this image of the boy in mind that I wrote the stories in this book.”

The above quote suggests why some critics have associated Lee with aestheticism. His figurative use of the word “boy” to refer to any person in love is an example of his aesthetic portrayals of youth.

Reference

이응준, 신경숙 표절 의혹 제기 “순수문학 프로작가로서 용인될 수 없는 행위” , 스타뉴스인터뷰, 2015
http://www.starnnews.com/news/index.html?no=386013
'표절 폭로' 이응준 "알만한 사람 다 알면서 모른척", 뉴시스 인터뷰, 2015
http://www.mimint.co.kr/article/board_view.asp?strBoardID=news&bbstype=S1N12&bidx=174506

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Overseas Awards 해외 수상 내역

  • Awarded for the 2015 16th Lee Mu-young Literature Prize

Works 작품

Translations 번역서

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