Han Sorya
Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. Han Sorya (Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1., born Han Pyŏngdo;Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. 3 August 1900 – 6 April 1976) was a Korean writer, literary administrator and politician who spent much of his career in North Korea. Regarded as one of the most important fiction writers in North Korean history, Han also served as head of the Korean Writers' Union and Ministry of Education.
During his career, Han survived a number of purges that were caused by factional strife within the Workers' Party of North Korea, to become a member of the Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea. Han, motivated by personal grievances against his rival writers, sometimes acted as the force behind the purges within the cultural establishment as well. Han himself was purged in 1962. In his works, Han offered some of the earliest known contributions to the cult of personality of Kim Il Sung. His influence is felt in North Korea even today, though his name has been forgotten from official histories. Han's best-known work, the anti-American novella Jackals, however, has been invoked in the 2000s.
Early life
[edit | edit source]Han was born on 3 August 1900 in Hamhung, in the north of Korea, Empire of Japan. His father was a county magistrate. He graduated from middle school in 1919 and attended Nippon University in Tokyo from 1921 to 1924,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. studying sociology.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. He emigrated to Manchuria in 1925 but returned to Seoul in the south in 1927.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. In 1944, he returned to his native Hamhung. After the liberation of Korea, he settled in Pyongyang.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.
Career
[edit | edit source]Han was one of the most prominent fiction writers in the history of North Korean literature.[4] During his career, Han earned the official title of "the greatest writer of modern Korean literature", which he shared with Yi Kiyŏng, and was called a "living classic".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. Han's career was at its height from 1955 to 1957.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. Han, along with Kim Tu-bong, shaped North Korea's cultural policies.[5]
In Japanese-occupied Asia
[edit | edit source]Before the division and independence of Korea from Japan, Han was an insignificant author. His subsequent fame would only be due to his association with the Korean Artist Proletarian FederationLua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. (KAPF),[6] which he joined in Seoul in 1927. The organization had been founded in 1925 during his emigration in Manchuria,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. and after the liberation it would have been the only left-leaning Korean literary organization. For this reason, Kim Il Sung would promote writers like Han who had belonged to it and exaggerated their achievements.[6]
During the early 1930s, Han did briefly associate himself with leftist ideas, but later, during the Pacific War, he became a pro-Japanese writer.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. He also joined pro-Japanese writers' organizations.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. After the war, he reinvented his image abruptly. Besides the Japanese, he also distanced himself from the Domestic faction of the Workers' Party,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. though some scholars like Wada HarukiLua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. explicitly include him in the faction.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. From this position, he played an important role in opposing the Soviet Koreans faction during the late 1950s.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.
Emigration
[edit | edit source]After the liberation of Korea, writers were faced with the task of establishing a national literature. Some, like Kim Namch'ŏnLua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1., sought to gather a wide range of both moderate and progressive writers to write "democratic national literature".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. A writers' association called the Headquarters for the Construction of Korean LiteratureLua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. (MR: Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.) was founded in 1945 immediately after the liberation by Kim and others. Han, however, disagreed with this approach, accusing it of forgetting class questions.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. Since the 1930s, Han had already had bad personal relations with these writers originally hailing from the south of Korea. The struggle for dominance in the North Korean literary bureaucracy made them worse.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. In retaliation Han, together with other writers including Yi Kiyŏng, founded the Korean Proletarian Literature Alliance (MR: Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.).Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. For Han's purposes his fellow writer Yi Kiyŏng, though respected, was not particularly interested in political matters and thus posed no threat to Han's own aspirations.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. The two organizations became merged to form Korean Writers' AllianceLua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. (MR: Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.) in late 1945.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. Disapproving of this, Han moved to the north of the country, and was one of the first writers to do so.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.
In North Korea
[edit | edit source]Soon after starting his career in North Korea, Han had become one of the earliest and most enthusiastic admirers of Kim Il Sung,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. with whom he had met in February 1946.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. Han acted in his writing as a "curator of the personality cult" of Kim Il SungLua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. and was, in effect, the official hagiographer of Kim.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. Indeed, the cult's beginnings can be traced as far back as 1946Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. when Han coined the appellation "our Sun" to describe Kim.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. Han was also the first to employ the phrase "Sun of the Nation" in referring to Kim.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. Considered protégé of Kim,[7] Han survived the purge of the Domestic faction.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. The August faction criticized Han for his close ties with Kim Il Sung.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.
Writers opposing Han, such as Yim Hwa, were purged because of their connections with South Korean communists. When the Domestic faction, including its leader Pak Hon-yong, were purged,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. Han attacked their associates in the literary circles from 1953 onwards.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. Later, between 1955 and 1957, Han attacked the Soviet Koreans faction,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. accusing them of "factional, splitting activity"Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. and "not allow[ing] the party and the people to demonstrate their good feeling and love toward their leader".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. It is possible that Han influenced Kim Il Sung to wage his campaign against the Soviet Koreans' faction specifically on the literary front, culminating in Kim's famous "Juche speech" of 1955: On Eliminating Dogmatism and Formalism and Establishing Juche in Ideological Work.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. The speech credits Han for uncoveringLua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. "serious ideological errors on the literary front"[8] and can be considered an expression of public support for Han.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. In editions after Han's purge in 1962, his name is omitted or replaced with the expression "prominent proletarian writers".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.
During his career, Han held multiple posts in the literature administration as well as politics in general. Since 1946, Han edited North Korean Federation of Literature and Arts (NKFLA) organ Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. and was the chairman of the organization since January 1948.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. During the Korean War, he was the chairman of the united Korean Federation of Literature and Arts (KFLA)Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. and a member in its Literature Organization.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. Since 1953, Han was the chairman of the Korean Writers' Union.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. This position made him the most powerful cultural administrator of the country and he effectively ran the whole system of publishing literature and providing for the writers.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. Han also wrote for the Rodong Sinmun in the 1950s.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.
In 1946, Han became a member of the first Central Committee of the Workers' Party of North Korea.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. He maintained the post in the party and its successor, the Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea, until 1969.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. Han became the minister of education in May 1956Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. and retained his post as the chairman of the Writers' Union.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. During his ministerial career, Han initiated a campaign to diminish the importance of Russian language teaching in North Korean colleges in the spring of 1956.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. He also started to enlist writers with a proletarian background.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.
Purge
[edit | edit source]In 1962, Han was accused of "parochialism" and "bourgeois decadence" by the NKFLA. He was consequentially expelled from the party and stripped of his offices.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. His purge coincided with the election of the third Supreme People's Assembly.[9] The following year, he was exiled to a village in Chagang Province.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. Han was likely pardoned later, in 1969,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. when his name reappeared as a member of the party Central Committee. Han was never reassigned to any other post he had held. He was absent from the 5th Congress of the Workers' Party of Korea in November 1970, leading B. R. Myers to conclude that it is likely "though by no means certain, that Han died sometime between late 1969 and late 1970",Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. with some preference for the year 1970.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. Han's gravestone at the Patriotic Martyrs' Cemetery in Pyongyang,[10] however, gives the date of his death as 6 April 1976.[11] Ultimately, the secrecy practiced by North Korea precludes any certain knowledge about "when (or even if) Han died".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.
In Han's wake, other cultural figures, like Ch'oe Sŭnghŭi and Sim Yŏng, were purged also.[9] The regime faced a problem in Han's work being politically useful in nature, but his name tarnished. His name began to be disconnected from his work, which was still widely disseminated. For the future, North Korean publishing authorities would employ a policy of publishing collective works of creative teams and withhold names of individual authors, a practice that was observed particularly in the 1970s and started to wane only in the 1980s.[6]
Legacy
[edit | edit source]Though Han Sorya's name has been since been all but forgotten in official North Korean accounts, his influence on contemporary North Korean literature has been significant.[4]
Literately, Han's style of writing has been described as experimental in his employment of various narrative structures.[12] Andrei Lankov considers Han mediocre as a writerLua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. and assess his rivals Kim Namch'ŏn and Yi T'ae-junLua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. "marginally more gifted", however considering North Korean literature of the period "boring and highly politicized propaganda" across the board.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. Lankov describes Han "unscrupulous" as an opportunist and careerist.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. The literary style and ideologies of Han and some of his adversaries are very similar, and Han's prevailing is due to factional strife. Some aspects of the struggles are baseless, too, as some works by Han include rather sympathetic depictions of Japanese soldiers, while it was many of his rivals who were purged because of their "pro-Japanese" tendencies. Thus, Lankov concludes, the struggle within the literary establishment can be attributed to conflicting personal ambitions more than anything else.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.
Yearn Hong Choi assess that "Han is not a typical North Korean writer" but an extremely political one in his attempt at pleasing Kim Il Sung.[4] B. R. Myers contrasts Han's legacy with that of North Korean poet Cho Ki-chon. While in Han's works Kim Il Sung embodies traditional Korean virtues of innocence and naivety having "mastered Marxism–Leninism with his heart, not his brain",Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. in Cho's he exemplifies particular traits of the rather early cult of personality built upon Soviet Marxism–Leninism and bloc conformity.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. The style of Han based on Korean ethnic nationalism ultimately established itself as the standard of propaganda over Cho's.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. According to Myers, Han is not a writer of fiction in the official literary doctrine of socialist realism at all, but "his own man, not a socialist realist". Yearn Hong Choi disagrees, and points to Han's one-time praise of the Soviets and Kim Il Sung as well as his employment of propaganda in praise of a "utopian" North Korea as proof of him being a socialist realist. According to Yearn, Myers simply has a different idea of what socialist realism is from North Korean writers.[4]
An exception to Han's forgotten legacy in North Korea exists. The multi-part film Nation and Destiny not only features him but allows Han to be a hero of the film. This was the first time that an anti-establishment figure has been the hero on North Korean screen.[13] In South Korea, Han's works were banned by the Ministry of Culture and Information.[14]
Works
[edit | edit source]History (MR: Ryŏksa) was the first long North Korean work to deal with Kim Il Sung during the Anti-Japanese struggle.[15] Yan'an faction member Yi P'il-gyu expressed harsh criticism of History,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. aimed at Han's close relationship with Kim Il Sung: "Han Sŏl-ya — he should be killed. He deserves it even only for just one book — History. He is a very bad and harmful man; he is Kim Il Sung's sycophant, a bootlicker".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.
Jackals
[edit | edit source]All in all, there were a lot of poor people living around here. The missionaries had purchased the area for twenty wŏn upon arriving in Korea twenty years ago. Since then they had turned it into a scenic summer retreat, on which Reverend Yi and one or two newly-rich families had recently erected neat brick houses. But far from benefiting from this, those who had always lived there in their rock huts just became more inextricably enmired in poverty as time went on.
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Jackals,[a] is a 1951 novella by Han, noted for its anti-American and anti-Christian tendencies.[17]Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. Jackals tells the story of a Korean boy murdered by American missionaries with an injection.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. In North Korea, the story is taken to be based on fact,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. and B. R. Myers assesses that it is possible that it gave impetus to allegations of biological warfare in the Korean War by North Korea.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. Called "the country's most enduring work of fiction",[19] it is still influential in North Korea where the word "jackals" has become a synonym for "Americans", and papers like Rodong Sinmun regularly invoke the language of the novella.[17]
The emotional story is inspired by Maxim Gorky's sentimental novel Mother,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. which is considered the first socialist realist novel,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. and a story that Han was familiar with.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. Myers traces the story's foundation back to anti-Christian stories in rural colonial Korea as well as in fascist Japan.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. The metaphor of the villain as a beast, too, is more readily associated with wartime Japanese propaganda than socialist realism.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. It had, however, featured in the works of early Soviet writers as whose work Han knew, as well as in textual genres not bound by the official socialist realist dogma, such as journalism.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.
Jackals was republished in Chosŏn munhakLua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1., Ch'ŏngnyŏn munhak and Chollima in August 2003, one year after the Bush administration designated North Korea as part of the "axis of evil".Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. After the Sony Pictures Entertainment hack of 2014, North Korean media employed similar rhetoric against Secretary of State John Kerry. One article compared Kerry with a jackal no fewer than eleven times.[17] Jackals was adapted on stage and performed in Pyongyang in 2015.[18] The novel remains one of the very few North Korean works of fiction that have been translated into English.[20]
List of works
[edit | edit source]- Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.[21] Short story.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.
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- Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. Autobiographical novel.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.
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- Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. Trilogy.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.
- Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.
- Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. People's Prize (1958).Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.
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See also
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Notes
[edit | edit source]- ^ The Korean name of the novella is Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. (Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.), which literally means 'dholes'. In English, the work is often known as Jackals following Myers' translation.[17] Sometimes Wolves is used,Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. whereas North Korean sources use Wolf.[17][18]
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References
[edit | edit source]- ^ Wit 2015, p. 44.
- ^ Myers 1994, p. 191.
- ^ Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.
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Works cited
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Further reading
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External links
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- Grave of Han Sorya on FlickrLua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.
- Han Sorya at the Encyclopedia of Korean Culture Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.
- Han Sorya at North Korean Human Geography Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.
- Lua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1. on YouTubeLua error: Internal error: The interpreter exited with status 1.
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- 1900 births
- 1970 deaths
- Education ministers of North Korea
- North Korean novelists
- People from Hamhung
- Socialist realism writers
- 20th-century novelists
- Members of the 1st Central Committee of the Workers' Party of North Korea
- Members of the 2nd Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea
- Members of the 3rd Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea
- Members of the 4th Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea
- Members of the 1st Supreme People's Assembly
- Members of the 2nd Supreme People's Assembly
- Burials at the Patriotic Martyrs' Cemetery