Bae Myung-hoon (; born 1978) is a South Korean science fiction writer. He has written ten novels, over fifty short stories and novellas, and numerous essays. He is best known for his composite novel Taweo (ÃÂÂì Tower) and short story collection Anyeong, ingongjonjae (ìÂÂë Â, ì¸공존ì¬ Hello, The Artificial Being!). He was named one of the âÂÂten best science fiction writers in South Koreaâ by The Science Times in 2012.
was born in Busan, South Korea in 1978. He earned his bachelor's and master's degrees in international relations at Seoul National University. He made his literary debut in 2005 when his short story âÂÂSeumateu Dâ (ì¤ë§ÂøD Smart D) won the SF Creative Writing Contest for best short story.
Bae Myung-hoon started writing science fiction from 2005. His debut, "Smart D", portrays the struggles of a sf novelist who is forced to abandon the use of the letter D out of legal troubles with a multinational corporation. Myung-hoon blurs the line between genre fiction and literary fiction. South Korean literary circles tend to make a clear distinction between the two; critics and writers who associate themselves with literary fiction rarely show interest in genre fiction. Yet Bae is a notable exception, attracting the attention of literary critics and publishers since the publication of his first full-length book Taweo (ÃÂÂì Tower) in 2009. A social science fiction novel with strong satirical undertones, Taweo is considered to be his breakthrough work.
That same year, his short story âÂÂAnyeong, ingongjonjaeâ (ìÂÂë Â, ì¸공존ì¬ Hello, The Artificial Being!) appeared in the literary journal Munhakdongne, which was unusual considering that science fiction in South Korea is often published in online communities instead of more traditional outlets such as literary journals or publishers. The short story won the 2010 Munhakdongne Young Writersâ Award, receiving the following comment from a judge: âÂÂBased on his impressive knowledge of space science, Bae Myung-hoon successfully portrays the pent-up frustrations of human existence erupting in the vast universe.â Bae expanded âÂÂAnyoung, ingongjonjaeâ into a collection of short stories and published it in 2010. In the afterword to the book, literary critic Shin Hyeong-cheol writes: âÂÂhis works have a stylistic variety that cannot be defined by a single genre, but that variety is only a means to an end . . . his ultimate goal is to explore serious anthropological questions."
While imaginative science fiction elements help differentiate BaeâÂÂs works from mainstream South Korean fiction, some critics see them as a creative limitation. In the same afterword quoted above, Shin Hyeong-cheol notes that âÂÂBaeâÂÂs stories are delightfully clear, but that clarity seems to come at an inevitable price. His characters are too clear . . . rather than having a palpable presence, they are there to serve a function; once you finish reading, the story leaves a vivid impression but the people fade away.âÂÂ