Sophat
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''Sophat'' ( km, សូផាត, ) was the first Cambodian romance novel written in 1938 by
Rim Kin Rim Kin ( km, រីម គីន; 8 November 1911–28 January 1959) was a Cambodian writer, and one of the founders of Cambodian modern literature. He was the author of '' Sophat'' ( km, សូផាត, 1938), the first published novel in ...
and was published in 1942. Along with ''
Kolab Pailin ''Kolab Pailin'' ( km, កុលាបប៉ៃលិន ; ) is a Cambodian novel that was written by Nhok Them in 1936 or 1943. Along with '' Sophat'' and '' Phka Srapoun'', ''Kolab Pailin'' is considered one of the three classic novels of mod ...
'' and '' Phka Srapoun'', ''Sophat'' is widely regarded as the “first” Cambodian novel and is considered one of the three classic novels of Khmer literature., though ''Tuek Tonle Sap'' ("The Waters of Tonle Sap"), by Kim Hak had been printed in 1939.


Context

Modern prose started later in Cambodia by comparison with the rest of Southeast Asia. It was only in the 1930s, several years after the installation of a printing-house in Phnom Penh that the new genre came into existence, and ''Sophat'' was the first
bestseller A bestseller is a book or other media noted for its top selling status, with bestseller lists published by newspapers, magazines, and book store chains. Some lists are broken down into classifications and specialties (novel, nonfiction book, cookb ...
of its kind.


Synopsis

Suon, a government official in
Sisophon Serei Saophoan ( km, សិរីសោភ័ណ, Romanization of Khmer#UNGEGN, UNGEGN: ; lit. 'Beautiful Freedom') is the capital and largest city of the Banteay Meanchey Province and the fourth most populous city in Cambodia. The city sep ...
, has an affair with an orphan woman called Soya, and she becomes pregnant. Concerned about his career and the wedding his own mother had arranged for him, Suon returns to
Phnom Penh Phnom Penh (; km, ភ្នំពេញ, ) is the capital and most populous city of Cambodia. It has been the national capital since the French protectorate of Cambodia and has grown to become the nation's primate city and its economic, indus ...
and leaves Sorya with a ring which lets her hope for his return, until she dies, and sends their son, Sophat, to learn at the pagoda. The eponymous hero is then sent to further his studies in Phnom Penh where he resides at Wat Ounalom, and befriends Narin, after he defends him from being bullied by others. Narin invites Sophat to come and live at his house, where he meets his adopted sister, Man Yan, which whom he falls in love. One day, Sophat forgets the ring his mother had given him in the bathroom. When the father of Narin sees the ring, he understands Sophat is his son, and as he becomes benevolent towards him. Sophat feels unworthy of such consideration, and flees to become a fisherman, and is presumed by all to be dead, while Man Yan is married to another man, whom she rejects on her wedding day as she jumps into a river, but is saved from drowning by Sophat who was fishing nearby, and the two are married and live happily ever after.


Analysis


A milestone of Cambodian literary identity

''Sophat'' is a milestone in Cambodian literature, as it integrates classic Khmer literature, such as many proverbs of
Krom Ngoy Krom Ngoy (born Ouk Ou; 1865 – 1936) was a Cambodian poet and a master of '' khsae diev''. His fame spread to Thailand at that time, not now and he was invited to sing for the then Thai King. He was well liked by the king and officials and ...
, and it introduces a
novel A novel is a relatively long work of narrative fiction, typically written in prose and published as a book. The present English word for a long work of prose fiction derives from the for "new", "news", or "short story of something new", itsel ...
genre which would prove immensely popular well into the 21st century in Cambodia. Parallel to the first Vietnamese novel written in French (Nguyen Phan Long’s ''Le Roman de Mademoiselle Lys,'' 1921), the first Cambodian novel in Khmer is also indicative of the construction of Cambodian and Vietnamese identities in relation to one another. ''Sophat'' quickly became part of the national literature and even internationally recognized as such. At Yale University in 1972, Khmer language was taught though Khmer reading selections which included folk stories, descriptions of Khmer antiquities, didactic essays, newspaper stories, and only one short novel, ''Sophat'', by Rim Kin.


A moral criticism of lust and ambition

''Sophat'', impregnated with Buddhist morality, has been republished many times and had a profound influence on the development of literature in Cambodia in the second half of the 20th century. Sometimes naive, but always lucid with regard to the society it describes, it is very characteristic of contemporary Khmer novels which, through often incredible adventures, forcefully denounce the flaws of successive regimes.


Women in Cambodian society

In a context in which the ''
Chbab Srey ''Chbab Srey'' ( km, ច្បាប់ស្រី, ; ) is a Cambodian code of conduct for women. Written in the form of a poem, it is a pendant to ''Chbab Pros'' ( km, ច្បាប់ប្រុស, link=no, ; ) which applies for men. ' ...
'' was still very influential and taught in both private houses and public schools, ''Sophat'' depicts both the repression endured by
Cambodian women Women in Cambodia, due to the influence of the dominant Khmer culture, are traditionally expected to be modest and soft-spoken. They are to be well-mannered, industrious, and hold a sense of belonging to the household. It is expected that the ...
at that time and the ripple effects that this treatment could have on all of society. This tale begins with the abandonment of a pregnant young woman by the well-to-do, high-ranking father of her unborn child, who goes to Phnom Penh for work. She is left to deliver her baby alone, without any support from relatives. When Man Yan, the adopted daughter of the rich man, falls deeply in love with the poor Sophat, she cannot express this to him because to do so would be unseemly for a woman. She goes on to attempt suicide by jumping into a river on her wedding day, but she is saved from drowning by the poor Sophat who has become a fisherman on that same river.


Recognition

The novel ''Sophat'' was written by Rim Kin in 1938 but not published until 1942 due to a lack of publishing facilities in Cambodia at that time. ''Sophat'' was eventually published in 1942 by Man-sanh, in
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, where it was cheaper than Cambodia to publish books. ''Sophat'' is Rim Kin's most famous novel and one of the classics of modern Cambodian literature. From 1955 to 1975, it was taught in the program of the fifth grade classes in Cambodia schools. ''Sophat'' was later translated by Gérard Groussin and published in French as ''Sophat'' by L’Harmattan in 1994.


See also

* ''
A New Sun Rises Over the Old Land ''A New Sun Rises Over the Old Land'' is a Cambodian novel published in 1961 and the only published work of Suon Sorin who disappeared during the terror of the Khmer Rouge. It has become a "canonical novel" and an iconic work of modern Cambodia ...
''


References

{{Authority control Cambodian literature 1942 novels 1942 debut novels