Park Chong-hwa
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Park Chong-hwa (Hangul: 박종화) was an early-modern Korean poet and novelist.”PARK Chonghwa" LTI Korea Datasheet available at LTI Korea Library or online at:


Life

Park Chong-hwa was born October 29, 1901, in
Seoul Seoul (; ; ), officially known as the Seoul Special City, is the capital and largest metropolis of South Korea.Before 1972, Seoul was the ''de jure'' capital of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (North Korea) as stated iArticle 103 ...
,
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 ...
. Park wrote under the name Woltan and attended the Huimun Uisuk Academy. He worked as a member of the literary club Swan (1922) and was the Vice of the Choson Writers' Association in 1946. He also served as the Chairman of the Seoul Committee for Arts (1947) and the Writers' Association of Korea (1949). Park was named the President of the Korea Arts Council (1955) and Chairman of the Board of the Korean Writers' Association (1964). He died on January 13, 1981.


Poetry

Park first entered the literary world as a poet, publishing “Anguished Youth” (Onoeui cheongchun) and “Milk-colored Streets” (Uyubit geori) in the inaugural issue of the journal ''Rose Village'' (Jangmichon) in 1921, and “Returning to the Secret Room” (Milsillo doragada) and “Elegy” (Manga) in the 1922 inaugural issue of ''White Tide'' (Baekjo). With his first poetry collection, ''Private Melodies of the Black Room'' (Heukbang Bigok, 1924), Park established his reputation as a romantic poet. After the Japanese occupation, censorship, prison, or even to death followed overt literary resistance and the predominant emotion among Korean writers in the 1920s was near-despair. Poets like Pak Chong-hwa and Yi Sang-hwa therefore turned to dark imitations of the European
decadent movement The Decadent movement (Fr. ''décadence'', “decay”) was a late-19th-century artistic and literary movement, centered in Western Europe, that followed an aesthetic ideology of excess and artificiality. The Decadent movement first flourished ...
. However, in a poem like "Koryo Celadon" Pak manages to use an aesthetic theme as an indirect statement of national pride, which was later to be taken up in his novels. During the
Goryeo dynasty Goryeo (; ) was a Korean kingdom founded in 918, during a time of national division called the Later Three Kingdoms period, that unified and ruled the Korean Peninsula until 1392. Goryeo achieved what has been called a "true national unificati ...
of a thousand years before, the unique grey-green
celadon ''Celadon'' () is a term for pottery denoting both wares glazed in the jade green celadon color, also known as greenware or "green ware" (the term specialists now tend to use), and a type of transparent glaze, often with small cracks, that was ...
ware (''ceong-ja'') had been the main type of ceramics produced on the Korean peninsula but now, under Japanese rule, artware pottery had all but disappeared from the country. In the past it had been particularly associated with Buddhist ceremonies, hence the
bodhisattva In Buddhism, a bodhisattva ( ; sa, 𑀩𑁄𑀥𑀺𑀲𑀢𑁆𑀢𑁆𑀯 (Brahmī), translit=bodhisattva, label=Sanskrit) or bodhisatva is a person who is on the path towards bodhi ('awakening') or Buddhahood. In the Early Buddhist schools ...
reference in the first stanza. The poem then turns to its later successors, the so-called white celadon (''baek-ja'') and cobalt-blue kingfisher shade mentioned in the second stanza, and in the third to the types of use to which the pottery was put.Korean Arts
/ref>


Novels

Learning this approach through his poetry, Park Jonghwa devoted the rest of his life to writing historical novels that espouse Korean nationalism. The
Literature Translation Institute of Korea The Literature Translation Institute of Korea ( ko, 한국문학번역원, LTI Korea, formerly known as Korean Literature Translation Fund) was founded in 1996 by the Government of South Korea with the aim of promoting Korean literature and cultu ...
summarizes this part of his career: :Devotion to Korean national identity remained the dominant theme of both Park Jonghwa’s fiction and life. Even in the climate of intense persecution toward the end of the Japanese colonial rule, Park Jonghwa refused to adopt a Japanese surname or participate in pro-Japanese literary organizations as many of his colleagues had done. During the colonial period, Park published several works of historical fiction, including ''Blood on a Silk Sleeve'' (Geumsamui pi, 1936), ''Long Awaited Spring'' (Daechunbu, 1939), ''The Eve'' (Jeonya, 1942), and ''Compassion'' (Dajeongbulsim, 1942). After the Liberation, Park Jonghwa continued to be active in the nationalist camp, serving as the vice president of both Pan-Korean Writers’ Association (Jeon Joseon munpilga hyeophoe) and Pan-Korean Federation of Cultural Organizations (Jeonguk munhwa danche chong yeonhaphoe). He also expressed his euphoria at the recovery of national independence in ''The Nation'' (Minjok), the final work in the trilogy that followed ''The Eve'' and ''Compassion''. :Thereafter, Park Jonghwa turned to more remote times to continue his examinations of Korean history from a nationalist perspective. ''The Japanese Invasion of 1592'' (Imjinwaeran, 1955), ''Hong Gyeongrae'' (1958), and ''The World in Women’s Hands'' (Yeoin cheonha, 1959) all manifest his desire to unearth the vigorous spirit of national pride from the pages of Korean history. By virtue of meticulous research and awareness of history’s grand scope, Park Jonghwa managed to preserve in these historical novels a great variety of Korean habits of thought and folk customs.


Works in Translation

* ''King Sejong : a novel'' (translated by Ahn Junghyo, New York 1980)


Works in Korean (Partial)

Novels * Blood on the Royal Sleeve * Ode to Spring * Friendly Buddha * My People * The Japanese Invasion * Resting Cloud


Awards

* Cultural Medal by the Order of the President in 1962 * May 16 Nationalism Prize in Literature in 1966 * Republic of Korea Rose-of-Sharon Citizen's Medal in 1970.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Park, Chong-hwa 1901 births 1981 deaths Korean writers 20th-century Korean poets Korean male poets 20th-century male writers