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Reading Colonial Korea through Fiction

The Ventriloquists. Critical Studies in Korean Literature and Culture in Translation

By (author) Kim Chul
Format: Hardback
Publisher: Lexington Books, Lanham, MD, United States
Published: 15th Mar 2018
Dimensions: w 152mm h 229mm d 10mm
Weight: 376g
ISBN-10: 1498565689
ISBN-13: 9781498565684
Barcode No: 9781498565684
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Synopsis
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.

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Reading Colonial Korea through Fiction: The Ventriloquists introduces to the English-speaking world the work of Kim Chul, one of the leading scholars of modern Korean literature, who has helped to reshape the field of Korean studies on both sides of the Pacific. The thirteen essays anthologized together in the volume give the reader a glimpse into Kim Chul's pioneering scholarship that effectively puts modern 'Korea' under erasure through his unrelenting exploration of 'Korea's' multiplicity, paradoxicality, ambivalence, and contradictions that stem from the imbrications of colonization, modernization, nation-building, and empires. This study, which combines Kim's expansive insights about colonial modernity with his razor-sharp close readings of amazing colonial literary works, is eminently teachable and will make an indispensable companion to numerous related college courses. -- Jin-Kyung Lee, University of California, San Diego Brilliant, learned, provocative-and yes, political and controversial-at last we have an English-language translation of essays by one of the world's most influential and ingenious scholars of Korean language and literature. From train travel and the postal service, to the telephone and the production of the national language, punctuation and dialects; from eroticism to love, intermarriage, and eating, and even the gold rush under total war mobilization-through his highly original readings of these and other traces of everyday life embedded in colonial literature, Kim Chul unveils the impossibility of discovering an unadulterated national language, literature, or culture. His perceptive and deeply informed readings demonstrate that while necessary, critiques of colonialism need not, in fact must not, succumb to the nationalist desire for authenticity and the national pristine. This is a critical and yet hopeful book that should be read by not only those with an interest in the colonial modern in Korea, but by anyone seeking to navigate out of the predicaments of the postcolonial present. -- Takashi Fujitani, University of Toronto