The Prague Post - S. Korea's Nobel winner Han Kang a modest, thought-provoking writer

EUR -
AED 4.269603
AFN 77.639492
ALL 96.761978
AMD 444.923255
ANG 2.081501
AOA 1066.093727
ARS 1662.188976
AUD 1.768572
AWG 2.092659
AZN 1.998162
BAM 1.955032
BBD 2.34228
BDT 141.624349
BGN 1.955244
BHD 0.43828
BIF 3426.353626
BMD 1.162588
BND 1.506608
BOB 8.035808
BRL 6.225422
BSD 1.162943
BTN 103.139472
BWP 15.482916
BYN 3.952947
BYR 22786.72803
BZD 2.338881
CAD 1.620857
CDF 2883.218911
CHF 0.930402
CLF 0.028391
CLP 1113.527037
CNY 8.277105
CNH 8.313523
COP 4502.820221
CRC 585.27002
CUC 1.162588
CUP 30.808586
CVE 110.221689
CZK 24.366331
DJF 207.088625
DKK 7.466589
DOP 72.811389
DZD 151.522414
EGP 55.228732
ERN 17.438822
ETB 169.064939
FJD 2.631521
FKP 0.864933
GBP 0.866802
GEL 3.156412
GGP 0.864933
GHS 14.362356
GIP 0.864933
GMD 83.706455
GNF 10086.036725
GTQ 8.910499
GYD 243.303348
HKD 9.047482
HNL 30.520007
HRK 7.533802
HTG 152.170205
HUF 392.381626
IDR 19295.359512
ILS 3.818317
IMP 0.864933
INR 103.182664
IQD 1523.501345
IRR 48898.458553
ISK 141.39398
JEP 0.864933
JMD 186.136858
JOD 0.824212
JPY 177.547008
KES 150.392864
KGS 101.668428
KHR 4669.165267
KMF 491.774781
KPW 1046.329685
KRW 1656.634804
KWD 0.356519
KYD 0.969119
KZT 628.293114
LAK 25219.090241
LBP 104140.030637
LKR 351.901721
LRD 212.236602
LSL 19.965255
LTL 3.43282
LVL 0.703238
LYD 6.324515
MAD 10.597536
MDL 19.740243
MGA 5197.95748
MKD 61.623048
MMK 2440.553633
MNT 4182.203163
MOP 9.322697
MRU 46.453746
MUR 53.18831
MVR 17.789835
MWK 2016.50762
MXN 21.387582
MYR 4.901409
MZN 74.289196
NAD 19.965255
NGN 1711.004274
NIO 42.793185
NOK 11.613547
NPR 165.023155
NZD 2.012632
OMR 0.447016
PAB 1.162938
PEN 4.003927
PGK 4.882082
PHP 67.453579
PKR 329.400163
PLN 4.250822
PYG 8120.808955
QAR 4.239834
RON 5.095656
RSD 117.131137
RUB 94.699321
RWF 1687.436927
SAR 4.360886
SBD 9.568731
SCR 17.261252
SDG 699.294788
SEK 10.963108
SGD 1.50615
SHP 0.913612
SLE 27.111132
SLL 24378.896782
SOS 664.638832
SRD 44.251573
STD 24063.227755
STN 24.490377
SVC 10.176001
SYP 15115.753503
SZL 19.955159
THB 37.821897
TJS 10.815204
TMT 4.069059
TND 3.414958
TOP 2.722901
TRY 48.492695
TTD 7.896897
TWD 35.574618
TZS 2850.175539
UAH 48.223851
UGX 3994.430402
USD 1.162588
UYU 46.421759
UZS 13982.50562
VES 219.744073
VND 30645.824024
VUV 140.928204
WST 3.221373
XAF 655.699345
XAG 0.023722
XAU 0.000287
XCD 3.141953
XCG 2.095876
XDR 0.813476
XOF 655.699345
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.905287
ZAR 19.980935
ZMK 10464.68151
ZMW 27.585042
ZWL 374.352915
  • RYCEF

    -0.1900

    15.35

    -1.24%

  • RELX

    0.3800

    45.82

    +0.83%

  • NGG

    -0.1700

    73.71

    -0.23%

  • SCS

    -0.0050

    16.855

    -0.03%

  • RIO

    1.4900

    67.74

    +2.2%

  • GSK

    0.0950

    43.595

    +0.22%

  • RBGPF

    -1.0800

    77.14

    -1.4%

  • BTI

    -0.4300

    51.55

    -0.83%

  • VOD

    0.0300

    11.3

    +0.27%

  • CMSD

    -0.0290

    24.371

    -0.12%

  • CMSC

    0.0100

    23.75

    +0.04%

  • BCC

    0.9700

    75.49

    +1.28%

  • BCE

    -0.1350

    23.155

    -0.58%

  • BP

    -0.2350

    34.735

    -0.68%

  • AZN

    -0.1700

    85.7

    -0.2%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    14.13

    +0.42%

S. Korea's Nobel winner Han Kang a modest, thought-provoking writer
S. Korea's Nobel winner Han Kang a modest, thought-provoking writer / Photo: JUNG YEON-JE - AFP

S. Korea's Nobel winner Han Kang a modest, thought-provoking writer

South Korean author Han Kang, who won the Nobel Prize in Literature Thursday, has vowed after receiving other top literary awards that she would continue writing "as if nothing had happened".

Text size:

The 53-year-old is the first South Korean to receive the honour, the Swedish Academy hailing "her intense poetic prose that confronts historical traumas and exposes the fragility of human life".

Han's "The Vegetarian", which tells the story of an ordinary woman's rejection of convention from three different perspectives, also won the Booker prize in 2016.

She said after that award, which caused a spike in international sales on top of her more familiar South Korean market, that she hoped to stay out of the limelight.

"I took the subway here," she told reporters at the time. "I want to continue living as if nothing had happened."

She is only the second South Korean to receive a Nobel prize, after former president Kim Dae-jung received the Peace Prize in 2000 for his efforts to end tensions with North Korea.

Han's works are known for their profound and thought-provoking narratives, often exploring themes of violence and trauma.

Her 2014 novel "Human Acts" was inspired by the 1980 massacre in her home city of Gwangju, when pro-democracy protests were brutally suppressed by the military.

And 2016's "The White Book" is set in Warsaw and covers the turmoil, death and cruelty of war.

"I believe that writing a novel based on a historical event is not just about recounting past events, but about exploring human nature," Han said in an interview with the Yonhap news service last year.

She also said in a 2023 lecture in Gwangju that "the violent scenes depicted in the novels are not intended to reveal violence, but to stand on the other side of it".

- 'Inherited literature DNA'? -

Han's father was also a renowned novelist and, when "The Vegetarian" became 2007's most-read book in South Korea, local media praised her "inherited literature DNA".

Her father responded that she had "surpassed him a long time ago".

Han has said that writing is her way of making sense of the world.

"For me, to write is to endlessly question what is life, what is death, who am I," she said in a 2015 interview with the Literature Translation Institute of Korea.

"When I write, especially when I'm writing novels, I'm exchanging one, two, three, sometimes four years for that book," she said.

Many in South Korea expressed shock and delight at her win after other potential winners, including poet Ko Un, failed to attract the Nobel Academy's attention.

"I think many writers like me had given up, thinking that there is a limit to how Korean literature can be perceived to international audiences," Bae Yoon-eum, a novelist, told AFP.

"I was just stunned when I saw the news, my heart stopped but I am so happy. I am so proud that South Korean literature is finally being recognised."

- Translated fiction -

Literary merits aside, the success of "The Vegetarian", her first book to appear in English, was helped by coinciding with South Korea's emergence as a prominent player on the global cultural stage.

Han is from a new wave of younger writers eager to move away from the traditional Korean reverence for intellectualism that is often dominated by older male critics with tastes firmly rooted in the 1970s.

The author shared the 50,000 pounds ($72,000) Booker Prize cheque with her British translator Deborah Smith.

A dearth of capable translators, coupled with an equally limited number of works suitable for foreign readers, had long stymied efforts to find a wider audience for Korea's literary output.

That changed when the Literature Translation Institute of Korea (LTI), which was set up in 1996 and has championed new writers in recent years, allowed translators to choose the books on which they would like to work.

Translated fiction is still a very small genre, representing just 1.5 percent of fiction and 3.5 percent of literary fiction, but it provided five percent of fiction sales and seven percent of literary fiction sales last year.

Growth in translated Korean fiction has been particularly strong in markets such as Britain.

H.Vesely--TPP