Characteristics of Feminine Writing in 1990s Korean Women’s Novels: Women’s Autobiographical and Confessional Writing


-1. Women’s Autobiographical Writing: Reflection of the Self



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3-1. Women’s Autobiographical Writing: Reflection of the Self
and Social Reality
Autobiographical and confessional writings comprise a distinctive subgenre of
women’s or feminist literature (Felski 1989:89). By definition, autobiography is
regarded primarily as a genre of self-disclosure. If any text or writing is classi-
fied or characterized as autobiography or autobiographical literature, one ele-
ment is indispensable. Rita Felski, an American feminist scholar, has clearly
noted that “it is the factual resemblance of the identity of author and narrator or
protagonist” (Felski 1989:89-90). Autobiographical literature, on one hand, con-
tains a retrospective account of the woman author’s life centered on a “unifying
vision of self-identity:” “a retrospective narrative written by the author concern-
ing her own existence as a female” (Felski 1989:90). On the other hand, as
Leigh Gilmore notes, “autobiographical texts allow us to see the discontinuities
in identity of female protagonist and the interrupted, fragmented women’s sub-
ject” (Gilmore 1994:16-9). She goes further to argue that “autobiography is
ontologically, epistemologically, and organizationally founded upon principles
of identity” (Gilmore 1994:17). 
Since the mid-1990s, many women’s autobiographical and confessional texts
have emerged in Korean contemporary literature. Accordingly, Korean literary
criticism has called for more attention to be paid to them with different perspec-
tives. Women’s autobiographical novels have played an important role in the
pursuit of self-definition by female authors: they have played out an anxious,
often uneasy struggle, to discover a female self. Many Korean literary critics
regard autobiographical writing as a primary mode for the discovery of women’s
existence or female identity. Woman’s ‘autobiographics’ can provide a more
general means to reflect on the experience of women and the construction of
female subjectivity (Gilmore 1994:7). Indeed, Korean women’s autobiographi-
cal writing has been founded on the matter of female subjectivity or construction
of femininity. In terms of autobiographical literature, female novelists seem to
adapt much of their own lived experiences and write of the female existence as
the individual in great detail. By positing author as a female protagonist or
Characteristics of Feminine Writing in 1990s Korean Women’s Novels
103


“paralleling between the life of the author and the female protagonist,” (Felski
1989:89) female writers ultimately become able to mirror their own lives and the
social reality of women more objectively. With this regard, autobiographical
novels reflect, to some extent, the social and material configuration of a
woman’s reality at the time. To take a point of view of the female protagonist
allows new insight into the construction of particular conjunctural moments in
relation to femaleness or womanhood, resulting in an endless self-scrutiny, a
search for a pure female self. Feminist autobiographical and confessional writing
may also accommodate the specific needs arising from their social function in
the context of women’s contemporary cultural and political struggles (Felski
1989:115). Furthermore, autobiographical writing can serve to articulate some of
the specific problems experienced by women and play an important role in the
process of self-identity formation and cultural critique (Felski 1989:112).
As a result, the main parts of Korean women’s novels also appear to conform
to autobiographical and confessional writing models. Korean feminist novelists
of the 1990s have more actively expressed their desire for seeking women’s
identity, self-discovery, and self-invention. Accordingly, feminist novelists’ con-
cerns have resulted in more autobiographical and confessional writing: a strong
desire and painful quest for the discovery of women’s identity first emerge in
their literary writings.
A popular Korean woman novelist, Sin Gyeong-suk’s female protagonists in

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