foundations of specific periods in modern Korean times.
3
In Park’s novels
Whoever had Eaten so Many Singa, and
Doubting if the
Mountain was Really over There, female protagonists survive the Korean War
and suffer the tragic aftermath of the war: they experience
the ordeal for the sur-
vival of life as well as conflict with the outside world after the war. Kwon
Yeong-min makes similar points that Park’s novels seek to explore and affirm
the feminine value in heroines (Kwon 2000:12-3). Namely, the heroine’s person-
ality as a woman exercises a power or the possibility to substitute for a given
patriarchal family system. The female protagonists internalize and reify femi-
nine ethics: Park’s texts reconceptualize the ethical consciousness and the sense
of female protagonists in an aesthetic way. The ethical personality as a woman
becomes equivalent to the feminine value and positive femininity in Park’s texts.
The stories in Park’s novels begin during Korea’s colonial time, but mainly
focus on the Korean War. Most female characters are born while Japan rules
Korea. They undergo the tragic Korean War and confront the confusing situation
of Korean society in the 1960s. The core of Park’s novels appears to describe
and construct the memory of the female protagonists from a new and different
perspective
during the Korean War; they seek to break the seal of the memory of
female protagonists. In fact, the literary works of Sin and Park take a good deal
of autobiographical factors and texts; the female protagonist represents the
female authors as such. Korean literary critics have contended the factual resem-
blance of author and protagonist in both novelists’ literary works: their novels
contain retrospective narratives centered on the female author’s life.
In Sin’s
The Lonely Room, the lived experiences of the female protagonist
directly and indirectly reflect the social condition of her time in Korea. It not
only historically but also contemporarily mirrors a woman’s social reality in
Korea with great detail; it points out the important
issues and problems such as
rapid urbanization, people’s migration to the big cities, and industrialization in
modern Korea. In
The Lonely Room, the protagonist works at a factory in a big
Characteristics of Feminine Writing in 1990s Korean Women’s Novels
105
3. See Kim and Lee. Primarily, I agree with their analysis and its broader implication of women’s
autobiographical writing for the self-discovery of women. They seek to explore and determine
the ways in which women’s autobiographical texts deeply relate to the narrative for self-discov-
ery of a female protagonist. I agree that to some degree women’s autobiographical texts entail
the narratives for self-discovery of women. In this paper, I take on
some of their arguments and
the valuable, significant interpretations on Korean women’s autobiographical novels (Kim and
Lee 1997:209).
city and starts a new life in the urban area; she works as a factory girl like
numerous women during modern Korean times. Meanwhile, she also wishes to
one day be a writer; she writes a novel in her ‘lonely room’ after returning from
the suffering at work. In her own dream, the protagonist identifies herself with a
writer, not an ordinary factory girl. For her, writing about her own experiences
and feelings can be construed not only as part of a progressive revelation to the
self, but also as a real search for the self-identity of a female individual. By writ-
ing, she eventually becomes able to explore or acknowledge
her own existence
as a female individual (unifying self-identity).
The Lonely Room simultaneously
allows us to see the interruption and discontinuities in self-identity of the female
protagonist. At a certain point, she seems to resist her reality as a factory girl and
attempts to escape the harsh reality standing against her own desire of becoming
a writer. The protagonist struggles to find expression to her own words and
invents her own world through writing. Nevertheless, in the end, this novel
shows a unifying vision of the female protagonist’s self-identity. In
The Lonely
Room, the very act of the protagonist’s writing serves to fulfill her own dream; it
also works to discover a woman’s identity while simultaneously redeeming her
subjectivity as a woman. While writing her
own novel in her lonely room, she
accomplishes a kind of internal growth and at the same time attains a greater
self-understanding.
Park Wan-seo’s novels emphasize the impact of the Korea War followed by
mass migration to urban areas, which change the young and innocent female
protagonist’s life; whereas Sin Gyeong-suk’s novels start during the industrial
era of the early 1960s to the late 1970s. In relation to a notion of a communal
female identity, female protagonists have aspects representative of women’s
communal experience. In short, Korean women’s authors use their own lived
experiences as representative of Korean women of their respective times.
The novels of Sin and Park primarily take a mode of autobiographical writ-
ing. More importantly, they contain the narrative of the female protagonists’
inner development. Besides, the female protagonists
mainly struggle to discover
their selves. This is why the autobiographical writing of Sin and Park, in a sense,
can be identified with the narratives of self-discovery of the female protagonist.
In the words of feminist literary researcher Rita Felski, “the narratives of ‘female
self-discovery’ and ‘gender identity as women’ are initially associated with the
contemporary social and cultural conditions” (Felski 1989:121). Korean
women’s autobiographical and confessional writings can be read as socio-histor-
ical texts of modern Korea.
106
The Review of Korean Studies
Many Korean feminist literary critics have contended that those narratives of
self-reference and self-representation of female authors contributed to fulfilling
their frantic pursuit for self-identity and gender identity in a social and political
context (Kim, Lee, Park, and Sim 1999:158-9). For women’s writing, the narra-
tive conception of the female self renders the idea of a core self and woman’s
identity intelligible and recognizable without
reducing it to masculine terms,
suppressing differences, and without insulating the female self from social rela-
tions. Women’s autobiographical texts base a core ability to describe and reflect
their own lived experience; thus, these texts represent the diverse voices
‘of/among’ many women and many relations that they have experienced.
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