Cho Hae-jin (, born 1976) is a South Korean writer.
Life
Cho Hae-jin was born in 1976 in Seoul, and graduated from the Ewha Womans University in education, and then graduated from the same university's graduate school in Korean literature. She began her literary career in 2004 when she won the Munye Joongang Literary Award for Best First Novel.
In late 2008, she taught students in Korean studies at a university in Poland, working as a Korean language teacher for about a year. At this time she read an article about North Korean defectors in Belgium, and this led to the publication of her second novel I Met Lo Kiwan ().
In 2013, I Met Lo Kiwan () won the 31st Sin Dong-yup Prize for Literature, and in 2016 she won the 17th Lee Hyo-seok Literary Award for short story "Sanchaekja-ui haengbok" (ì°ì±Â
ìÂÂì ÃÂÂë³µ Happiness of a Walker).
Writing
Literary critic Shin Hyeongcheol wrote in the commentary for Cho Hae-jin's first novel that "this author writes only about those that are physically dying, or are already dead socially." Also, literary critic Go Inhwan has stated of Cho's novels that they "start from the interest on the lives of others, and then through the painful process of seeping into their lives, they allow the readers to become infused in their inner selves with the lives of others", and that they have "blindingly clear patterns of communication that are engraved in the inner sides of readers."
Cho has clearly stated her opinion on literature, saying "fundamentally, literature, and also literature's identity, is like this. Dealing with the nameless people, and the problem of status and ethics, I believe, is not only literature's nature, but a common topic for all writers. Because those that donâÂÂt lack anything I'm sure the other media will remember on their own."
Works
Short story collections
- Bitui howi (ë¹Âì Ã¸ì The Guard of Light), Changbi, 2017. .
- Mokyo-il-e mannayo (목ìÂÂì¼ì ë§ÂëÂÂì Let's Meet On Thursday), Munhakdongne, 2014. .
- City of Angels (ì²Â쑤ì ëÂÂìÂÂ), Minumsa, 2008. .
Novels
- Yeoreumeul jinagada (ì¬ë¦Âì ì§ÂëÂÂê°Âë¤ Passing Summer), Munye Joongang, 2015. .
- A Forest That No One Has Seen (ìÂÂ무ë 보짠못àì²), Minumsa, 2013. .
- I Met Lo Kiwan (ë¡Â기ìÂÂì ë§Â둤), Changbi, 2011. .
- Haneopsi meotjin kkum-e (ÃÂÂìÂÂì´ ë©Âì§ ê¿Âì On an Endlessly Wonderful Dream), Munhakdongne, 2009. .
Works in translation
- ï òÃÂÃÂÃÂõÃÂøûð àþ ÃÂøòðýð (I met Lo Kiwan) (Russian)
Awards
- 2016 "Sanchaekja-ui haengbok" (ì°ì±Â
ìÂÂì ÃÂÂë³µ Happiness of a Walker) Lee Hyo-seok Literary Award.
- 2014 Bitui howi (ë¹Âì Ã¸ì The Guard of Light) 5th Young Writers' Award.
- 2013, I Met Lo Kiwan (ë¡Â기ìÂÂì ë§Â둤) 31st Sin Dong-yup Prize for Literature
- 2004, "Yeoja-ege gileul mutda" (ì“ÂÂìÂÂ겠길ì 묻ë¤ Asking for Directions to a Woman), Munye Joongang New Writer's Award.
Further reading
- Book review: ï òÃÂÃÂÃÂõÃÂøûð àþ ÃÂøòðýð (I met Lo Kiwan) (English)
- Book review: I met Lot Kiwan (English)
- Book review: A Forest That No One Has Seen (English)
- Essay: The Journey to Meet Lo Kiwan (English)
- Significance of North Korean Defectors in Fiction (English)
- ï½¢ì¸ìÂÂì ì§ÂìÂÂì ¸ê°Âë 벼ëÂÂë ì¸ìÂÂë¤」, ó°¡Âì¸ê³Âì¼보ó°¡Â, 2008ëÂ
 10ì 17ì¼. { "Lives On the Brink That are Disappearing From the World", Segye Ilbo, 17 October 2008. }
- ï½¢'ìÂÂ'ì´ ì´ëÂÂë âÂÂë¡Â기ìÂÂâÂÂì´ ëÂÂë¤」, ó°¡ÂÃÂÂ겨ë Âì 문ó°¡Â, 2011ëÂ
 4ì 29ì¼. { "'El' One Day Became 'Lo Kiwan'", The Hankyoreh, 29 April 2011. }
- ï½¢<nowiki>ì¶ì ë³Â곡젠ì ë´ë´Ã 고백ë¤- [리뷰 ìÂÂì¤짠âÂÂë¹Âì Ã¸ìÂÂ</nowiki>]ï½£, ó°¡ÂÃÂÂêµÂì¼보ó°¡Â, 2017ëÂ
 2ì 17ì¼. { "Calm Confessions Upon Turning Points of Life â [Review] Short Story Collection 'The Guard of Light'", Hankook Ilbo, 17 February 2017. }
- ê¹Â미ì Â, 「그ë¼ìÂÂë 공ê°Âê³¼ ì°ì Âì ì´ë»겠ê°ÂëÂÂ¥ÃÂÂê°Â: 조ô짠ìÂÂì¤짠ó°¡Âì²Â쑤ì ëÂÂìÂÂó°¡Âï½£, ó°¡Âì°½ìÂÂê³¼ë¹ÂÃÂÂó°¡Â, 2009ëÂ
 ë´Âø. { Kim, Mijeong, "Then How Are Empathy and Friendship Possible: Cho Hae-jin's Short Story Collection, City of Angels", The Quarterly Changbi, Spring 2009. }
- ë°Âì¸ì±, ï½¢ì´Ã 론충ë§Âà결à: 조ô짠ìÂ¥øìÂÂì¤ ãÂÂë¡Â기ìÂÂì ë§Â둤ãÂÂï½£, ó°¡Âì°½ìÂÂê³¼ë¹ÂÃÂÂó°¡Â, 2011ëÂ
 ê°ÂìÂÂø. { Park, Inseong, "Such an Abundant Absence: Cho Hae-jin\s Novel I Met Lo Kiwan", The Quarterly Changbi, Fall 2011. }
- ÃÂÂì Â, ï½¢ÃÂÂì¸ì 고õ과 ì¦ÂìÂÂê³¼ì ëÂÂì¼ì : 조ôì§Âì ãÂÂë¡Â기ìÂÂì ë§Â둤ãÂÂ를 ìÂÂë¡ ÃÂÂì¬」, ó°¡Âì½Â기àó°¡Â, ë¶Âì°ëÂÂÃÂÂêµ ì¸문ÃÂÂì°구ìÂÂ, 2014. { Heo, Jeong, â Identification With Symptoms of Pains of Others: With the Example of Cho Hae-jinâÂÂs I Met Lo KiwanâÂÂ, Cogito, Pusan National University Humanities Institute 2014. }
- ì´경ì§Â, ï½¢ì¸êµÂì´론맠걸기: 조ôì§Âê³¼ ë°±ìÂÂ린ì ìÂÂì¤ì ì¤Â쓼ë¡Âï½£, ó°¡Âì°½ìÂÂê³¼ë¹ÂÃÂÂó°¡Â, 2014ëÂ
 ì¬ë¦Âø. { Lee, Kyeongjin, "Talking In a Foreign Language: On the Works of Cho Hae-jin and Baek Surin|, The Quarterly Changbi, Summer 2014. }
- ë¥ÂìÂÂì°, ï½¢ìÂÂì¡´ì´ë¼ë ë¶Âì Âë°©ì ÂìÂÂ: 조ôì§Âë¡ ï½£, ó°¡Âì¤ëÂÂì 문ìÂÂë¹ÂÃÂÂó°¡Â, 2017. { Ryu, Suyeong, "The Indeterminate Equation of Survival: On Cho Hae-jin", Literary Criticism Today, 2017. }
References