Chae Man-shik

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Chae Man-shik
Hangul 채만식
Hanja 蔡萬植
Revised Romanization Chae Man-sik
McCune-Reischauer Ch'ae Mansik
Pen name
Hangul 백릉
Hanja 白菱
Revised Romanization Baengneung
McCune-Reischauer Paengnŭng

Chae Man-shik (June 17, 1902- June 11, 1950) was a Korean novelist known for his satirical bent. He was born in Okgu, in present-day Gunsan, Jeollabuk-do, to a family of the Pyeonggang Chae clan. He entered the literary stage in 1924 with his short story entitled "Toward the Three Paths." He began to attract critical attention ten years later, with the publication of "A Ready-Made Life."

[edit] Novels

  • The Muddy Current
  • Peaceful Reign, which tells the tale of four generations of a Korean family in the late 19th and early 20th centuries

[edit] References

Lee, Jae-sun (1996). "Chae, Man-shik", Who's who in Korean literature. Seoul: Hollym, 26-28. ISBN 1565910664. 

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