3-2. Women’s Confessional Writing: Elaboration of the Inner-
World and Disclosure of Un/conscious Desire
The literary discourse on women’s confession or confessional writing in terms
of a literary mode or style generally relates to a detailed description of a
woman’s inner world or self-consciousness: the majority of Korean women nov-
elists of the 1990s sought to elaborate the inner world of the female protagonist,
or a search of the self. Such detailed representations and exaggerated expres-
sions in relation to the inner world of the heroine, revelation of the self-con-
sciousness, her episodic and fragmented desires to others, and her delicate mind
have been frequently discussed as the core factor of women’s confessional writ-
ing in Korean women’s literature. Moreover, women’s confessions in terms of a
feminist literary style or mode have been taken as a deeply contested issue with-
in contemporary Korean literary criticism.
This section looks at Eun Hui-gyeong’s Wife with Emptiness and Jeong Mi-
gyeong’s My Bloody Darling. Initially, both literary works delineate an obscured
un/consciousness of the female protagonist and her reality and experience; each
story possesses many confessional factors in terms of a literary form and con-
tent. In both works, much of the narrative seems to underlie the female protago-
nist’s psyche: the feminist confessional writing generally serves to shape and
construct the female psyche. Here we take confessional writing as a stylistic
device and literary characteristic, not as any real element or factual content in
relation to the author’s real life and personal experiences.
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In both works, the female or male protagonist writes a diary or personal note
and the other of them comes to read it by chance. Ultimately, their writings
make the core of the narrative confessional and personal.
Wife with Emptiness is a story about a middle-class married couple in an
urban area. In it, the narrator usually takes the husband’s point of view, but when
the husband reads his wife’s diary, the narrator takes her perspective. It takes a
first person perspective: one is the husband’s and the other is the wife’s perspec-
tive. Through the husband’s reading of the wife’s diary, her desires and thoughts
that have been repressed in her inner world became visible and real. In other
words, one level of her unconsciousness comes to be revealed. The extent to
which writing a diary or secret note within a literary work can be construed not
only as a confessional, but also as a basic form to expose an authentic core of
self: a search for the female self. While reading the diary, the husband becomes
able to trace the inner voice, desires, and consciousness of his wife. Then he
comes to acknowledge her existence as a woman. As a result, in women’s fic-
tion, ‘writing and reading a diary’ make it possible to elaborate the inner world
of the female protagonist and build up a sense of self.
In actuality, she is just an ordinary married woman who has devoted her life
to taking good care of her two children and husband. She lives in a big apart-
ment in an urban city. To some degree, she seems to live a satisfactory and
happy life as a wife and mother, and yet her diary contradicts, explicitly, such
assumptions and reality. In her diary, she is a single and very attractive woman
who enjoys her single life very much. She has a professional, well-paid job, and
she even tries to have relationships with many men at once. The woman in the
diary is completely different from what and who she is in the real world. Her
everyday life does not seem that different from any other married woman of her
age. Some passages, in which she exposes her sexual pleasures and desires, need
some consideration in relation to containing sensual and bodily experiences in
terms of marking her own sexuality. Other passages, in which she depicts the
details of daily events as they occur, offer a retrospective account of part or all of
the female protagonist’s life. And yet the detailed depictions of her daily life and
the narrations for self-consciousness of the inner world are more likely to seem
fragmented, episodic, and repetitive.
Wife with Emptiness appears to contain a great deal of confessional text of
the female protagonist: the female protagonist becomes able to articulate her
desire and inner feelings with greater details by writing a diary. In short, confes-
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The Review of Korean Studies
sional writing contributes to revealing and articulating her ‘real’ existence as a
woman, not as a wife and mother.
Another confessional work, Jeong Mi-gyeong’s My Bloody Darling deals
with the embodiment of an intense anxiety and obscurity of the female protago-
nist Yu-Seon after she finds out that her husband had a lover before his sudden
death. In this sense, the title has a paradoxically double meaning: ‘bloody’ can
be interpreted as the tension between hatred and affection of the female protago-
nist toward her husband. She starts her own journey after she finds and begins
reading her husband’s diary. In other words, My Bloody Darling seeks to detail
her anxiety and hatred arising from her husband’s adultery; such narrations
involve women’s confessional writing because they write of her psyche pro-
foundly: self-consciousness, inner emotions and feelings. Yu-Seon describes her
husband as follows: “He is my valentine and my heart itself. I always wished to
pour my blood into his by cutting each other’s wrists with sharp blades” (Jeong
2004:84). However, her ‘valentine lover’ turns out to be a ‘bloody’ valentine
who has never loved her: in this text, ‘bloody’ acquires the opposite meaning of
cold and cruel. Accordingly, the image of ‘bloody valentine’ in her perception
was entirely broken and taken apart: he was no longer her valentine and she lost
her lover in the end.
As her identity and undoubted belief of a loved woman from the ‘bloody
valentine’ is starting to be questioned and disrupted, Yu-Seon tries to separate
herself from him. After struggling and suffering, she eventually comes to
acknowledge her husband as a ‘bloody valentine’: Yu-Seon’s deep hatred and
powerful affection toward her bloody valentine are dynamically described in the
vivid expressions of her psyche and through revelations of her unsatisfied desire
and longing for her husband.
Both My Bloody Darling and Wife with Emptiness focus on the disrupted and
fragmented psyche of the female protagonists and don’t pursue a unifying vision
of a woman’s identity and coherent female subjectivity. Confessional texts are
concerned with the heroine’s interruptions and eruptions, that is, the complexity
in relationships with the discovery of a gender identity. In addition, confessional
texts offer different perspectives on the estrangement of the female protagonist
from the social norms of gendered positions and sexuality. In effect, women’s
confessional writing in which the topics of female self, women’s identity, and
sexuality are recurrently addressed serve to reflect on women’s diverse experi-
ences and show the dynamic un/consciousness of the female self.
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