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Song Yong
is not one of the more celebrated writers in Korea but more of an outsider
looking in on the mainstream writing establishment in Korea. His work
has never seen commercial success, nor it is well-known in Korea, although
he is respected among prominent literary critics. The lack of interest
in Korean literature in North America makes it difficult to find a publishing
venue for "out-of-the ordinary" fiction such as Song Yong's....
Song Yong's
fictional world is different from the mainstream Korean fiction in the
70s and 80s that tended to reflect the political struggle for democracy
and the consequences of rapid industrialization. It focuses on the alienation
of individuals who are marginalized from society for various reasons.
They are vulnerable within a homogenous society where dominant public
discourse enforces rigid hierarchy, obedience, and conformity. There
is little precedent in Korean fiction for Song Yong's calm, subdued
and often detached narrative voice. He is one of the few Korean writers
influenced by Existentialism in the 70s, and the themes of existential
angst and despair appear throughout his work....
Song Yong's
stories have a surreal tone which is rare in Korean fiction.... His
stories never follow a standard formula or contrived plots but employ
a unique narrative voice and technique that can be identified as distinctly
his. They may deal with taboo topics in Korean society such as the unequal
American-Korean relationship, materialism, and disturbing physical and
mental abuses prevalent in the Korean military penal system.... Song
Yong's stories display a Kafkaesque world of ordinary people trapped
in authoritarian society. They present a different Asian fiction to
readers accustomed to the two most common genres: Chinese books on Mao's
cultural revolution and Murakami's brand of weird-for-weird's-sake Japanese
fiction.
--from
the introduction by translator Jason Park