Yi Sang

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a Korean name; the family name is Yi.
Yi Sang
Hangul 이상
Hanja
Revised Romanization I Sang
McCune-Reischauer I Sang
Birth name
Hangul 김해경
Hanja
Revised Romanization Gim Hae(-)gyeong
McCune-Reischauer Kim Hae-gyŏng

Yi Sang (September 14, 1910 - April 17, 1937) was one of Korea's most innovative writers of modern literature. He was born in Seoul, Korea as Kim Hae-gyeong. He was trained as an architect, but he is remembered for the poems and short stories he wrote during his short life. He is most widely known by his pen name.

Yi Sang wrote both poetry and short stories that were very unlike anything that had ever been written. He was very unconventional in the structures that he used. His 'outside-the-box' modernism was very much ahead of its time. Most of his works were done during the 1930's, when Korea was under the cultural administration of the Japanese. Some of his works were written with a very political agenda against the Japanese, but written allegorically so as to get by Japanese censorship.

While visiting Tokyo in 1936 he was arrested on charges of thought crimes. While in prison he contracted tuberculosis and died. He was 27 years old, according to East Asian age reckoning.

Yi Sang never received much recognition for his writing during his lifetime, but his works began to be reprinted in the 1950s. In the 1970s his reputation soared, and in 1977 the Yi Sang Literary Award was established. It has become one of Korea's most prestigious awards for literary works. His most famous short story is probably "Wings" (Nalgae in Korean), and his poem "From Crow's-eye View" is also well-known.

[edit] References

  • Im Hon-yong (1996). "Yi Sang", in Korean Culture & Arts Foundation: Who's who in Korean literature. Seoul: Hollym, 518-520. ISBN 1565910664. 

[edit] External links

Persondata
NAME Yi Sang
ALTERNATIVE NAMES Kim Hae-gyeong
SHORT DESCRIPTION Korean writer
DATE OF BIRTH 1910-09-14
PLACE OF BIRTH Seoul, Korea
DATE OF DEATH 1937-04-17
PLACE OF DEATH Tokyo, Japan
Languages