Hwang In-suk
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Hwang In-suk (; born December 21, 1958) is a South Korean poet."Hwang In-suk " LTI Korea Datasheet available at LTI Korea Library or online at:


Life

Hwang In-suk was born December 21, 1958, in
Seoul Seoul, officially Seoul Special Metropolitan City, is the capital city, capital and largest city of South Korea. The broader Seoul Metropolitan Area, encompassing Seoul, Gyeonggi Province and Incheon, emerged as the world's List of cities b ...
, South Korea. She debuted in 1984 with the poem I'll Be Born as a Cat. As the title of her debut poem suggests, Hwang is deeply interest in society's "alley cats", the lonely, isolated existences of the city, both human and feline. In fact, Hwang admits that she still sets out water and food for the stray cats in her neighborhood. She says that although she never sees the cats she feeds, she enjoys the feeling of returning and finding the dishes empty."Hwang In-suk" Biographical PDF, LTI Korea, p. 1 available at LTI Korea Library or online at: Friends of Hwang have named her the "poet of the 4 haves and the 4 have-nots". The four "have-nots" are home, money, husband, and children; the four "haves" are poetry, friends, a non-possessive spirit and a giving heart.


Work

The Korea Literature Translation Institute says, about Hwang: :As in the line "A neighborhood where cats no longer live /is a neighborhood empty of the human soul" (selected passage from "Look After the Cats"), the poet values careful observance of one's surroundings, calling together the poor, shabby, lonely existences, and giving them words of comfort so that our souls do not become empty. In this way, loneliness is treated as an important theme in her poetry. Hwang says, "If you look carefully, whether spirits or humans or things, somewhere someone is muttering 'I'm lonely'". It is this "incurable disease", she says, that leads people to sink themselves in grief. Still, she finds the loneliness is not easily overcome. She writes about hopes that are always hiding somewhere. Those hopes are achieved through a poetic method that grasps at life's truths through pure language. She transmits this awareness to her readers. "Let's go back. To the beauty of language, the warmth of language, the softness of language. If we can do that, then we will grow closer to the beauty of life, the softness of life, the warmth of life." Loneliness is an important theme in Hwang's work. The poet says, "If you look carefully, whether spirits or humans or things, somewhere someone is muttering 'I'm lonely'". Hwang has been extremely prolific, with at least thirteen collections published since 1988. Hwang has had at least one work published in translation, online, Above the Roof.


Awards

* 1999 Dongseo Literary Award * 2004 Kim Suyeong Literary Award * 2018 Hyundae Munhak ontemporary LiteratureAward


Works in Korean (Partial)

Poetry Collections * The Birds Set the Sky Free (, 1988) * Sadness Awakens Me (, 1990) * We Meet Like Snowbirds (, 1994) * My Gloomy, Precious One (, 1998) * The Evident Stroll (, 2003) * Night Train to Lisbon (, 2007) Prose Collections * I am Lonely (, 1997) * The Flesh is Sad (, 2000 * The People on the Roof (, 2002) * Writings by Hwang In-suk (, 2003) * Now, Those Hearts Again (, Ida Media, 2004) * What Alleys Contain , 2005) * Patterns of the Voice (, 2006) * Days of Joy (, 2007)


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Hwang, In-suk 1958 births 20th-century South Korean poets Living people 21st-century South Korean poets South Korean women poets 20th-century South Korean women writers 20th-century South Korean writers 21st-century South Korean women writers 21st-century South Korean writers Writers from Seoul Seoul Institute of the Arts alumni