Characteristics of Feminine Writing in 1990s
Korean Women’s Novels: Women’s
Autobiographical and Confessional Writing
1
Jung Suk Yoo
Korean women’s literature played a central role in modern Korean literature of
the 1990s. A large number of women writers and their noteworthy literary
works emerged and prevailed in the field of modern
Korean literature during
that era. In the meantime, Korean feminist literary criticism addressed a variety
of issues and questions regarding the value and limitations of Korean women’s
writing.
Responding
to this topic, this paper initially analyzes the characteristics
and importance of feminine writing in Korean women’s novels of the 1990s.
In examining them, I will seek to explore the potential
of feminine writing in
the context of feminist literary discourse and women’s writing practice. This
work focuses mainly on the two types of Korean women’s writing: autobio-
graphical and confessional. Furthermore, this work
goes on to investigate the
broader literary implications and social meanings of women’s writing. Lastly, I
will point out the limitations of ‘feminine’ writing in Korean women’s novels
of the 1990s.
In terms of feminist aesthetics, Korean women’s
autobiographical and con-
fessional writings have striven to involve a wide range of literary discourses
and feminist criticisms. With this persistent process, Korean women’s
writing
becomes capable of acquiring the power and possibility to uncover the rou-
The Review of Korean Studies Volume 11 Number 2 (June 2008) : 97-115
© 2008 by the Academy of Korean Studies. All rights reserved.
1. Literary works referred to in this paper include the following: Sin Gyeong-suk’s
Oettan bang
(The Lonely Room),
Oraejeon jibeul tteonalttae (Leaving Home a Long Time Ago), and
Gichaneun 7sie tteonane (As the Train Departs at 7 a.m.); Park Wan-seo’s
Geu manteon singa-
neun unga da meogeoseulkka (Whoever had Eaten so Many Singa) and
Geu sani jeongmal
geogi iseoseulkka (Doubting if the Mountain was Really over There); Eun Hui-gyeong’s
Bincheo (Wife with Emptiness); and Jeong Mi-gyeong’s
Naui pituseongi yeonin (My
Bloody
Darling).