Gisangdo
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''Gisangdo'' (
Korean Korean may refer to: People and culture * Koreans, ethnic group originating in the Korean Peninsula * Korean cuisine * Korean culture * Korean language **Korean alphabet, known as Hangul or Chosŏn'gŭl **Korean dialects and the Jeju language ** ...
: 기상도, 'Weather Map') is a Korean poem written and published by
Kim Kirim Kim Kirim (Korean: 김기림; Hanja: 金起林; May 11, 1908 – ?) was a Korean poet and literary critic who represented Korean modernist literature in the 1930s. Kim wrote monumental poems such as “The Weather Chart” (1936), “Wind Speed o ...
in 1936. ''Gisangdo'' is a
satirical poem Poetry (derived from the Greek ''poiesis'', "making"), also called verse, is a form of literature that uses aesthetic and often rhythmic qualities of language − such as phonaesthetics, sound symbolism, and metre − to evoke meanings in ...
that compared the volatile state of
international affairs International relations (IR), sometimes referred to as international studies and international affairs, is the scientific study of interactions between sovereign states. In a broader sense, it concerns all activities between states—such as ...
in the 1930s to the development of a
typhoon A typhoon is a mature tropical cyclone that develops between 180° and 100°E in the Northern Hemisphere. This region is referred to as the Northwestern Pacific Basin, and is the most active tropical cyclone basin on Earth, accounting for a ...
. The poem has been lauded as a prime example of the
modernism Modernism is both a philosophy, philosophical and arts movement that arose from broad transformations in Western world, Western society during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The movement reflected a desire for the creation of new fo ...
of Kim Kirim, a man who attempted to imbue his poems with an awareness of modern civilization.


Overview


Structure

''Gisangdo'' is composed of 7 sections and 424 lines. Each section is labeled with titles that follow the progression of a typhoon: ''Segyeui achim'' (세계의 아침 Morning of the World), ''Siminhaengnyeol'' (시민행렬 Citizen Parade), ''Taepungui gichim sigan'' (태풍의 기침 시간 Rising Time of the Typhoon), ''Jachwi'' (자취 Tracks), ''Byeongdeun punggyeong'' (병든 풍경 A Diseased Landscape), ''Olppaemiui jumun'' (올빼미의 주문 Owl's Incantation), and ''Soebakwiui norae'' (쇠바퀴의 노래 Song of an Iron Wheel)''.'' The 7 sections are further divided into 3 parts, according to time. Sections 1 through 3 depict the time before the typhoon's arrival, sections 4 through 6 depict the typhoon as it ravages the land, and section 7 shows the time after the typhoon has passed.


Summary of each section

In section 1, ''Segyeui achim'', before the typhoon begins, the atmosphere is light-hearted and hopeful. However, in section 2, ''Siminhaengnyeol'', the narrator senses the unease around the world in places such as China, America, France, and Korea. Then in section 3, ''Taepungui gichim sigan,'' warnings come that a typhoon has made its approach, and descriptions of the typhoon are given through dialogue. Section 4, ''Jachwi,'' depicts the scenes of chaos caused by the typhoon as churches, libraries, brothels, and roads fall into disarray. Section 5, ''Byeongdeun punggyeong'', also shows a series of devastated landscapes in the wake of the typhoon. Section 6, ''Olppaemiui jumun'', depicts the despair, grief, and sorrow brought about by the typhoon. And finally, a day after the typhoon has passed in section 7, ''Soebakwiui norae,'' a new sun rises and the poem sings of the will and hope of life once again.


Subject and style

''Gisangdo'' criticizes modern society through the image of a charging typhoon. In particular, the poem satirizes the fascism and imperialism of the 1930s by comparing the volatile state of international affairs to a volatile climate. Kim Kirim, who was a journalist before he became a poet, actively brought into his poems the various pieces of knowledge he acquired through working in the editorial department. Kim Kirim also included elements—such as the names of foreign flowers, the international harbors, transcontinental trans, world maps, and foreign consulates—that signaled to the reader that a new era had arrived. These characteristics show us the modernist side of Kim Kirim and a man who attempted to address the changing times.


Context

''Gisangdo'' was heavily influenced by T. S. Eliot's ''The Waste Land''. T. S. Eliot's name appears frequently in Kim Kirim's writings on poetry, which Kim Kirim wrote in 1936 in Japan before he began studying I.A. Richards’ theories on poetry. In the author's note, there are passages that remind one of Elliot's ''The Waste Land''. For example, Kim Kirim revealed that he wanted to mix every aspect of modern civilization to make a piece that was like a symphony, and this can be compared to the way in which T. S. Eliot injected parts of Wagner's symphonies into ''The Waste Land''. ''Gisangdo'' and ''The Waste Land'' also draw similarities in the sense that they are both long poems that critically view the rise and fall of civilization.  Of course, that is not to say that there are not many differences between the two poems. Whereas ''The Waste Land'' is set in London, the center of imperialism, ''Gisangdo'' is set on the peripheries of imperialism, specifically in colonial Seoul and semi-colonial Shanghai. Likewise, ''Gisangdo'' reimagines the rise and fall of civilization—which was visualized in Europe by ''The Waste Land''—through the imagery of East Asia in the 1930s.


Critical reception

By depicting the state of contemporary international affairs in such grand scale, and by using colorful rhetoric and many modern techniques, ''Gisangdo'' garnered the attention of critics. Interest in the work, however, did not necessarily result in positive reception. While critics acknowledged the importance of such an ambitious work, they raised doubt concerning the conceptual depth and thematic integrity of the work. This doesn't change the fact, however, that there is great literary historical significance in Kim Kirim's attempt to express awareness of civilization and modern history through the form of a long poem. Korean poetry at the time had the sentimental tendency of wallowing in the gloomy atmosphere of the period; Kim Kirim, however, saw such a tendency as a feudalistic element to be overcome and attempted to create poetry that was suitable for modern times. ''Gisangdo'' asks the question of what kind of world poets should construct while standing on a waste land in which one can no longer sing in harmony with songs of the past. In this sense, as noted by one critic, ''Gisangdo'' presents both the problem of the times that modernist poets of Korea in the 1930s had to face, and the literary exploration of that problem.


Cover art

Of all the books of poetry published during the Japanese colonial period, none have been more highly praised for their modernist cover art as ''Gisangdo.'' The person who decorated the front of the ''Gisangdo'' was Yi Sang, another famous Korean poet. Kim Kirim and Yi Sang were both members of The Circle of Nine, a literary society formed in 1933 by Korean authors, and were close friends. At the age of 21, Yi Sang was hired as an architect at the offices of the Government General of Korea and won a design competition for the same office, proving his sense for design. In this way, the artistic sensibilities of two of Korea's most acclaimed modernists of  the 1930s are at play in ''Gisangdo.'' On the other hand, despite the fact he designed the cover for ''Gisangdo'', Yi Sang was himself unable to publish a book of poetry before his death in 1937. It was none other than Kim Kirim who planned and wrote a foreword for Yi Sang's poems which were published posthumously in 1949 under the title ''Yi Sang Seonjib'' (이상선집 Selected Works of Yi Sang).


Bibliography

*Kim, Kirim. ''Gisangdo''. Changmoonsa, 1936. *Kim, Kirim and Taesang Park. ''Wonbon Kim Kirim Sijeonjib'' (원본 김기림 시전집 The Complete and Unedited Poems of Kim Kirim), Gipeunsaem, 2014.''Wonbon Kim Kirim Sijeonjib'' includes not just ''Gisangdo'' but other works from the author, including ''Taeyangui pungsok'' (태양의 풍속Traditions of the Sun)'', Badawa nabi'' (바다와 나비 The Sea and the Butterfly)'', Saenorae'' (새노래Bird Songs), and can be purchased through online book sellers. http://www.kyobobook.co.kr/product/detailViewKor.laf?ejkGb=KOR&mallGb=KOR&barcode=9788974162405&orderClick=LAH&Kc=


References

{{reflist Korean poetry Korean literature 1936 poems