- 영문명
- Diaspora Aspects Reproduced in Hwang Sun-won’s Novels : Focusing on Short Stories from the Late 1940s to the 1960s
- 발행기관
- 한국언어문학회
- 저자명
- 이민정(Min-jung Lee)
- 간행물 정보
- 『한국언어문학』第128輯, 173~195쪽, 전체 23쪽
- 주제분류
- 어문학 > 한국어와문학
- 파일형태
- 발행일자
- 2024.11.30

국문 초록
The era of armed conflict. Humanism driven by diaspora. This can be called the virtue of diaspora. One of the writers who recreated diaspora in language is Hwang Sun-won. Hwang Sun-won is a writer who experienced the Japanese colonial period, the Korean War, and the era of globalization. Hwang Sun-won is a writer who experienced diaspora in reality and struggled for decolonization. He also had a desire to return home. Therefore, the time and space in his works are a mixture of decolonization and diaspora.
Among Hwang Sun-won’s short stories, the works that clearly reveal topophilia and diaspora are “The Dog of Mokneomi Village” (March 1948), “Rather My Neck” (August 1967), “Crane” (May 1953), “Life” (May 1952), and “Acrobat” (January 1952). In a time and space where colonial discourses coexist, a destructive diaspora causes us to experience the uprooting of our identity, and the separation and longing for home in migration drive topophilia as the other.
Many researchers have analyzed Hwang Sun-won’s novels as humanistic novels. It is natural that Hwang Sun-won’s works, which experienced migration, separation, and longing for home, namely destructive diaspora, raise the question of “how should humans live to be human?” Just as Levinas, a Jew, argued for “ethics of the other” while experiencing the Holocaust, Hwang Sun-won also had no choice but to reflect on “humanity, human dignity” as he formed his identity as a diaspora. Ultimately, he appeals that humanism, which generously accepts others, should be strengthened by transforming the hybridization of outsiders into fusion in the place of migration. In this paper, I intend to examine how humanism reproduces the world created by migration in Hwang Sun-won’s works by linking it with diaspora and topophilia.
The analysis of diaspora and topophilia through Hwang Sun-won's works is valuable in that it makes us look back on why we must be rooted in a place and live as human beings, while maintaining human morality. In an era of unstable identity, with a wavering identity. What can we do to live an authentic life? There is a need to deeply contemplate this.
영문 초록
목차
1. 디아스포라가 빚어내는 휴머니즘
2. 디아스포라로서의 토포필리아 찾기
3. 파괴적 디아스포라가 추동하는 인간 실존
4. 결론
키워드
해당간행물 수록 논문
참고문헌
- 한민족문화연구
- 인간사랑
- 국어국문학
- 일본학
- 한국근대문학연구
- 인문과학연구
- 현암사
- 황순원 연구
- 한국현대소설학회
- 우리문학연구
- 현대소설연구
- 영어문학페미니즘
- 현대소설연구
- 인문과학
- 비평과 이론
- 문이당
- 황순원전집 2
- 여이연
- 한신 문화사
- 동서문화사
- 논형
- 에코리브르
- 앨피
- 문예출판사
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