Lee Si-young (poet)
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Lee Si-Young (born August 6, 1950) (Hangul: ) is a South Korean writer.


Life

Lee was born in
Gurye Gurye (''Gurye-gun'') is a Administrative divisions of South Korea, county in the province of Jeollanam-do, South Korea. Gurye is a small, picturesque farming town situated between Jirisan and the Seomjin River. In the northeastern part of unwaveri ...
,
Jeollanam-do South Jeolla Province (; ''Jeollanam-do''; ), also known as Jeonnam, is a province of South Korea. South Jeolla has a population of 1,902,324 (2014) and has a geographic area of located in the Honam region at the southwestern tip of the Korean ...
Province, in
Korea Korea ( ko, 한국, or , ) is a peninsular region in East Asia. Since 1945, it has been divided at or near the 38th parallel, with North Korea (Democratic People's Republic of Korea) comprising its northern half and South Korea (Republic o ...
in 1950. He began publishing poetry in 1969, leading to his first volume Manweol (Full Moon in 1976). Ten years passed before his second collection. Lee served as vice-president of Publish Company for many years. He has also worked as the manager of the Creative Writing Center at
Dankook University Dankook University (commonly referred to as Dankook), abbreviated as DU or DKU, is a prestigious private research university in Yongin and Cheonan, South Korea. The university was established in 1947. It was the first university established after ...
, and in 2012 he entered the position of chairman of the Board of the Writers Association of Korea. .


Work

A poet of delicate sensibilities, Lee began his career depicting the gloomy everyday life under the Park Chung-hee military dictatorship in the 1970s and 1980s from the perspective of ordinary people—the subject he has explored with much love and sympathy. Such love has manifested in his desire to seek more than mere confessional release in his poetry: Lee aims to transform his art into a song for the suffering masses. His early poems are long and prose-like even, expressing his compassion towards the poor and the weak, and at the same time, embodying his fierce determination to preserve his humanity even amidst hardships. In the 1990s Lee's poems became drastically shorter in length. Composed of no more than two or three lines, they came to resemble
Zen Buddhist Zen ( zh, t=禪, p=Chán; ja, text= 禅, translit=zen; ko, text=선, translit=Seon; vi, text=Thiền) is a school of Mahayana Buddhism that originated in China during the Tang dynasty, known as the Chan School (''Chánzong'' 禪宗), and ...
poems in their use of minimal language and compacted form to encapsulate profound meaning and symbolic resonance. Lee's poems from this period recall the fact the poet had made his literary debut with
sijo ''Sijo'' () is a Korean traditional poetic form that emerged in the Goryeo period, flourished during the Joseon Dynasty, and is still written today. Bucolic, metaphysical, and cosmological themes are often explored. The three lines average 14 ...
or traditional Korean poetry characterized by highly restricted form. Such evolution in Lee's poetic mode indicates that the urgency and the wrenching emotions of his early years have been replaced with psychological calm and contemplative leisure. Lee has acknowledged that it is perfectly fine for him if his poems are no more than small “ripples” that carry his heart out to the readers and “lap at their feet for a moment like fallen leaves” before disappearing. Lee now hopes that in this age of excess, his poetry will remain just such small ripples. Lee's poetry is at once a gentle reproach to overly emotional poets and at the same time the humble confession of an aging poet who has weathered much hardships and has remained true to his art.


Works in Translation

* ''Variations: Three Korean Poets'' (Cornell Univ East Asia Program, 2002) * ''Patterns'' (Green Integer, 2014) * ''Dazwischen: Gedichte'' (Poems from collection translated into German by Andreas Schirmer, Edition Peperkorn, 2012)


Works in Korean (Partial)

Poetry collections * Full Moon (, , 1976), * Into the Wind (, , 1986), * Lightning Rod and Heart (, 1989), * Pattern (, , 1994), * In Between (, , 1996), * Calm and Blue Sky (, , 1997), * Silver Whistle (, , 2003), * Ocean Lake (, , 2004)


Awards

* Seorabeol Literature Award (1994) * Jeong Ji Yong Literature Award (1996)


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Lee, Si-young 1950 births Korean writers Living people