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


 Limitations and Critique of Feminine Writing in Korean



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4. Limitations and Critique of Feminine Writing in Korean
Women’s Novels
As Western feminist perspectives on the female self or women’s subjectivity
have long been salient in feminist philosophy, so have Korean feminist writers
and literary critics debated the topic of female selfhood or women’s subjectivity.
As Diana Meyers, clearly notes, “It is pivotal to question about personhood,
identity, the body, and agency” that Korean feminist literature addresses (Meyers
2004:1).
Simone De Beauvoir’s assertion that “He is the Subject, he is the Absolute”
(De Beauvoir 1989:12) whereas she is only other and object to man, tells us why
the self, the female subjectivity, is such an important issue in Korean feminist lit-
erature and the criticism of Korean women’s novels. Moreover, since women
have been represented as inferior to the masculine individual, the paradigm of
the self in a male dominated society is derived from the experience and perspec-
tive of men who have dominated the arts, literature, media, and scholarship.
“Responding to this matter, a large variety of feminist philosophers and scholars’
theoretical approaches and writing practices regarding the issue of the female
self have taken three main tacks,” as Diana Meyers briefly notes, “(1) critique of
established view of the self, (2) reclamation of women’s selfhood, and (3) recon-
ceptualization of the self to incorporate women’s experience” (Meyers 2004:1-
2). Similarly, women’s autobiographical and confessional writing/text have a
central role in raising or affirming the sense of female self or self-identity in
Korean women’s literature of the 1990s. Namely, they first are concerned with
such topics as exploring an authentic female self, the discovery of women’s
identity or femininity, and the assertion of female subjectivity. In short, women’s
writings seek to, at varying degrees, affirm women’s selfhood and embody
women’s lived experiences.
As Korean feminist novels have mainly dealt with such major themes as gen-
der identity, female subjectivity, and women’s different lived experiences in rela-
tion to femininity and motherhood, so to have women’s autobiographical and
confessional writings contained the narratives of the female psyche centered on
the inner self and the self-consciousness of the other. More importantly, they
base the desire for the discovery of the female protagonist’s self-identity (consis-
tent pursuit of self-definition) and her reflection on women’s social reality.
However, as some Korean literary critics have pointed out, Korean women’s
110
The Review of Korean Studies


autobiographical and confessional writing practices have posed some problems
and limitations with relation to a serious focus on the female protagonist’s psy-
che, more precisely, the heroine’s overwhelming fascination with the inner space
and its self-image which are in most cases excessively forged (Yang 2003:386).
In fact, within Korean women’s novels of the 1990s, such an infatuated preoccu-
pation with the inner world could be regarded as resulting in the female protago-
nist’s alienation and divorce from the outside world and collective women’s real-
ity. Actually, the heroine’s personality and character influence the quality of the
content and form of women’s novels. Accordingly, such female protagonist’s
character may well engender self-pity and self-justification by female readers.
Some feminist confessional writing ascribes to just reinforcing the ideal or given
image of women or femininity in favor of a masculine discourse, which helps
public readers accept it complacently: it conforms to a sexist binary system or
sexist ideology instead of resisting it (Y. Kim 2002:389-93). Felski also argues
against confessional writing’s “cathartic self-reproach rather than critical self-
analysis” (Felski 1989:107). Consequently, these problems and limitations in
women’s confessional writing can even extend to the denial or disclosure of the
possibility and the positive potential of feminine writing or the feminine in
Korean women’s literature. 
Another problem of Korean women’s writing is the limitation of subject mat-
ter. Korean women’s novels often end up having a melodramatic plot, love
affairs, and reproduction of gender stereotypes: that is, conforming to a given
category and formative gender roles of male and female, and telling sentimental
stories: for example, love affairs of men and women, fantasy for romantic love,
happy marriage, broken hearts, relations of heterosexuality, sex and adultery, and
cheating and revenge. At another level, the problem with women’s novels is said
to be ‘feeling too much.’ In particular, the problem of feeling too much emerges
in some examples of women’s confessional writing; the emotion and self-image
of female protagonists are at all times exaggerated in terms of the context of
women’s confession. Similarly, there are numerous female protagonists who are
inclined to be introspective, self-conscious, and isolated or alienated from others
and social interactions: throwing themselves into the world of selves or domestic
and private spheres. Such self-isolated, alienated heroines tend to withdraw from
any interpersonal relations and even emotional relationships, resulting in dimin-
ished social activities. Rather, they have a tendency to immerse themselves in
their dream world or live in the past, while reminiscing their lost time and space. 
Characteristics of Feminine Writing in 1990s Korean Women’s Novels
111


In effect, some Korean feminist writers and women novelists seem unable to
be free of those problems against the invention of ‘new’ feminine writing in
modern Korean literature; conversely, a heroine’s invariable infatuation with her
fantasies of memories, longing for romantic love, and immersion with the past
and interior space also could be traced in the works of some Korean women’s
novels. Such a negative inclination and its prevalence in women’s novels can
entail a refusal or resistance to the positive content and possibility of feminine
writing within Korean literary criticism. The focus on female characters and
their interior space, sensibility, inner feelings, self-consciousness is negatively
construed as the inferiority of women’s novels. Accordingly, Korean literary
criticism tends to conceive women’s novels or feminine writing only as stories
of love affairs or sentimental narratives. Then, it identifies feminine writing as a
simple expression of femininity, sensibility, and sentimentality of female
authors. Likewise, a negative understanding of Korean women’s writing mostly
originated from its indifference and divorce from women’s collective reality and
socio-historical context; it seldom takes into account any of the important social
issues regarding collective women. Instead, it mainly employs an individualistic
paradigm of the female protagonist. These typical problems and crucial limita-
tions with Korean women’s writing hold back the positive recognition of femi-
nine writing in Korean women’s literature. 

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