Cho Sung-ki
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Cho Sung-ki (; born 1951) is a South Korean writer.


Life

Cho Sung-ki was born March 30, 1951, in Goseong,
Gyeongsangnam-do South Gyeongsang Province (, ) is a province in the southeast of South Korea. The provincial capital is at Changwon. It is adjacent to the major metropolitan center and port of Busan. The UNESCO World Heritage Site Haeinsa, a Buddhist temple that ...
,
South Korea South Korea, officially the Republic of Korea (ROK), is a country in East Asia. It constitutes the southern half of the Korea, Korean Peninsula and borders North Korea along the Korean Demilitarized Zone, with the Yellow Sea to the west and t ...
. He attended
Busan Busan (), officially Busan Metropolitan City, is South Korea's second list of cities in South Korea by population, most populous city after Seoul, with a population of over 3.3 million as of 2024. Formerly romanized as Pusan, it is the economi ...
Middle School and
Gyeonggi High School Kyunggi High School () is the oldest modern high school in Korea, located in Gangnam District, Seoul. The school is an all-boys school, and its counterpart is , also located in Gangnam District, Seoul. Kyunggi High School has educated many leade ...
where he put himself through a strenuous self-training period reading nearly a thousand pieces of fiction, literary criticism and poetry while teaching himself grammar by hand-copying an entire grammar book. Cho also struggled with his sexual urges and found some refuge in religion. Cho entered
Seoul National University Seoul National University (SNU; ) is a public university, public research university in Seoul, South Korea. It is one of the SKY (universities), SKY universities and a part of the Flagship Korean National Universities. The university's main c ...
and graduated with a degree in law. He also received a graduate degree from Presbyterian Divinity School. He made his literary debut in 1971, winning the New Spring Literary Contest sponsored by The Dong-a Ilbo with a short story called “Kaleidoscope” (), but remained virtually silent for the next fourteen years."조성기" LTI Korea Datasheet available at LTI Korea Library or online at:


Work

Cho's literature, both novels and short stories, focus on the revelation of shameful personal aspects, a feature of his work that is interesting because his works also have an autobiographical nature. Cho made his literary debut in 1971, winning the New Spring Literary Contest sponsored by The Dong-a Ilbo with a short story called “Kaleidoscope” (), but remained virtually silent for the next fourteen years. In 1985, he broke this silence with “” and the work received the year's Today's Writer Prize. Since then, Cho Seonggi's literary output has been steady. He has received 1986 Christian Cultural Prize for The Night of Yahweh (), and 1991 Lee Sang Literature Prize for “A Fiction-Writer in Our Time” (). What underlies much of Cho's diverse fictional works is the sense of human life as confined. This confinement may take shape of political oppression as in "Buril Waterfall" (), or cultural violence as in "A Shaman in Our Time" (). Then again, one might be ensnared in one's own web of ambition; the novel A Crow's Eye View of Desire develops this theme using a sustained allusion to Lee Sang's famed series of poems. The novel, however, also offers a release from the confinement that is the fundamental condition of existence through violent outbursts of erotic energy. The novel ''Love in Our Time'' () also presents eroticism as the vital mechanism for the free release of inner life. Thus, eroticism, as well as humor and the juxtaposition of subjective interpretation and objective facts, are the main techniques Cho uses in his attempts to challenge human confinement.


Works in Korean (partial)

Novels * Liberty Bell (), * A Nest of Thorns (), * A Little Faster, with Sadness () * The Land of Baba (), * The Warring States Period () * The Burning Sword of Eden () Short Stories * Kings and Dogs (Wanggwa gae) * Anima, or Strange Confessions About Women () * The Road to Tongdo Temple ().


Awards

* New Spring Literary Contest * Today's Writer Award (1985) *
Yi Sang Literary Award The Yi Sang Literary Award (이상문학상) is a South Korean literary award. It is one of South Korea's most prestigious literary awards, named after Yi Sang, an innovative writer in modern Korean literature. The Yi Sang Literary Award was esta ...
(1991)


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Cho, Sung-ki 1951 births Living people South Korean writers