Don Mee Choi & Yi Yon-ju
Don Mee ChoiYi Yon-ju
In Korea's traditional Confucian times, the only women who were allowed to produce poetry within the public domain of men were kisaeng (courtesans/entertainers) who were one of the marginalized groups of people in Korean society. The division of public (intellectual, social, political) space of men and private (domestic) space of women was strictly observed. However, in the 1920s, Korean women poets challenged and violated the traditional divisions of space and gender roles by publishing their poetry publicly. By the 1930s, yoryu ("female") poetry was established and imposed on women poets. Yoryu poetry, still upheld today as the norm for women poets, is characterized by gentle, refined, and philosophical language that speaks about women's passivity within the natural world. Korea's traditional gender-role expectations also still persist today. Women are expected to fall into the defined roles of ch'onyo (a young unmarried woman/virgin), ajumma(married woman/middle aged woman with children) and halmoni (grandmother). Therefore, women who participate publicly in literary production still occupy a marginalized position in Korean society, especially if they resist patriarchal literary conventions. Yi Yon-ju's work has been acknowledged by the renowned feminist critic and poet, Kim Chong-nan. According to Kim, Yi's poetry has a crucial place in contemporary Korean feminist poetry like the works of Cho'e Sung-ja and Kim Hye-sun. Yi resisted the conventional literary expectations imposed on Korean women by completely departing from the tranquil and beautiful realm of metaphysical nature on which women poets are still expected to reflect. The realm into which Yi ventured was the realm of the oppressed. Yi depicted in her poetry women who live on the fringes of South Korean society, marginalized by rapid industrialization of the 70s and 80s, which, in part, was made possible by exploitation of young women from poor rural areas. Yi's poetry displays a penetrating awareness of Korean women's oppression that intersects gender, class, and nation. Not much is known about Yi's life. According to her brother, Yi Yong-ju, the night Yi committed suicide she asked him not to reveal anything about her life except for her date and place of birth. For many years, Yi had expressed her wish to end her life as she was in much despair from witnessing political and economic oppression of people during South Korea's dictatorships supported by the U.S. Yi was born in 1953, in Kunsan in the Northern Cholla province. She worked in Seoul and various parts of South Korea, including Uijongbu, a U.S. military camp town north of Seoul where women and children live trapped under devastating conditions of military prostitution, environmental pollution, and poverty. Yi excelled in various arts and was well known outside of literary circles by painters, filmmakers, singers, and dancers. Yi painted a great deal and was working on a collaborative video art project before she ended her life. These poems were selected from Yi's A Night Market Where There Are Prostitutes(Maeumyno ka ittnun pam ui sijang, 1991).--Seattle, December 2003
Yi Yon-juFestival of Waste
We sell useless kitchenware, old gas furnaces. Crinkled bills and discolored coins, we are. No transmission, no reception. (Translated from the Korean by Don Mee Choi)
Yi Yon-juA Family Photo
Father stays up all night playing cards. Sister drinks Bond glue, The three year-old baby of the family limps, limps, grows up Every night cities cave in one by one. (Translated from the Korean by Don Mee Choi)
Yi Yon-juA Crossroad
(Translated from the Korean by Don Mee Choi)
Yi Yon-juA Report on the Unconsciousness of the Masses
(Translated from the Korean by Don Mee Choi)
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