Kim Yong-man (writer)
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Kim Yong-man is a modern South Korean poet.


Life

Kim was born in 1940 in
Buyeo Buyeo (; ; ), also rendered as Puyŏ or Fuyu, was an ancient kingdom that was centered in northern Manchuria in modern-day northeast China. It had ties to the Yemaek people, who are considered to be the ancestors of modern Koreans. Buyeo is ...
,
Chungnam Province South Chungcheong Province (), informally called Chungnam, is a province of South Korea in the Hoseo region in the southwest of the Korean Peninsula. South Chungcheong borders the provinces of Gyeonggi to the north, North Chungcheong, Sejong Spe ...
, but claims several hometowns due to his close connection with them, including
South Jeolla South Jeolla Province (), formerly South Chŏlla Province, also known as Jeonnam (), is a province in the Honam region, South Korea, and the southernmost province in mainland Korea. South Jeolla borders the provinces of North Jeolla to the nor ...
, Gangwon Province, and the capital,
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 ...
. He moved frequently from one place to another, working in various occupations. Born to a very poor family, he barely completed high school and couldn't attend university, lacking money for tuition. Instead he became a police officer, although later in life he completed undergraduate as well as graduate studies. While working as a policeman, he participated in suppressing democracy movement protests by university students. Kim was assigned to a regional police station where he also watched over prisoners in the small lockup there. After resigning from the police, he tried his hand at several businesses, making quite a bit of money. His catering business experience became the backdrop for the novel, ''Neungsoo's Mother of Chuncheon Restaurant''. Unable to find happiness through mere material success, however, his fundamental aspirations for beauty and solitude led to his desire to write. He made his literary debut in 1989 with the novelette, ''Ornamental Silver Knife'', which was published in the well-known Korean literary monthly ''Hyundae Munhak''. The poverty of his family, diverse job history, and life travails served as excellent sources of inspiration for his work.


Work

Kim Yong-man's works tend to make readers question the nature of life. The kind of life contemplated by Kim is quite distant from the feigned lives of manic happiness held up by society. Metaphorically speaking, the author considers life to be a trashcan while human beings are not suited to being packaged in metaphysical grandeur. Perhaps that is why in omen Who Love Monsters a seemingly-virtuous wife is raped by a burglar, gets pregnant, yet bears and raises the child. She subsequently refers to herself as a "whore." From the author's perspective, human beings can be simply described as thieves or whores. In addition, he believes that it is through sin that human beings discover their true nature. Consequently, it is vulgarity, not sin, that Kim Yong-man despises. In Kim's first short story collection, ''Youse Ma Woman'', he draws a clear distinction between sin and vulgarity, viewing the former as unintended corruption, in contrast to the latter.Source-attribution, "Kim Yong-man" LTI Korea Datasheet available at LTI Korea Library or online at: http://klti.or.kr/ke_04_03_011.do#


Works in Korean


Short story collections

* ''Youse Ma Woman'' (1992) * ''The Knife-Wielding Wife'' (2006)


Full-length novels

* ''Blade and Sunlight'' (1993) * ''People's Era'' (1993) * ''Women Who Love Monsters'' (2008) * ''Neungsoo's Mother of Chuncheon Restaurant'' (2009)


Collections

* ''Mother's Virtual Space'' (2010)


Awards

* Park Young-joon Literature Prize (2002) * PEN International Literature Prize (''Women Who Love Monsters'', 2008) * Kyunghee Literature Prize (''Mother's Virtual Space'', 2010)


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Kim, Yong-man 1940 births Living people People from Buyeo County South Korean writers