Nam Jin-Woo (Hangul ë¨ì§Âì°; born 1960) is a South Korean poet, literary critic, and professor.
Nam Jin-Woo was born in Jeonju, South Korea in 1960. He studied creative writing at Chung-Ang University, where he also received his master's and doctoral degrees. His literary career began when he won the Dong-a Ilbo New Writer's Contest for poetry in 1981 and the Chosun Ilbo New Writer's Contest for literary criticism in 1983. He was an editor at the quarterly journal Munhakdongne and the monthly journal Hyeondaesihak. Since 2004, he has been teaching creative writing at Myongji University.
In the 1980s, he was a member of the literary society Siundong ("poetry movement") alongside poets Ha Jae-bong, Lee Moon-jae, and Park Deok-kyu. In 1999, he married the novelist Shin Kyung-sook. As a poet and critic, he played a major role in turning Munhakdongne into a quarterly magazine that introduced the latest Korean literature in the 1990s. In 1992, he accused writer Lee In-hwa for plagiarizing his debut novel Naega nuguinji malhal su itneun janeun nuguinga (ë´갠ëÂÂ구ì¸짠ë§Âàì ìÂÂë ìÂÂë ëÂÂ구ì¸갠Who Is It That Can Tell Me Who I Am) from other sources, and has since participated in other plagiarism debates. In the early 2000s, he actively voiced his opinion on the controversy over whether Munhakdongne, along with several other literary journals, was exercising too much power in the South Korean literary scene. In 2015, he became involved in a plagiarism debate once again, this time surrounding his wife and novelist Shin Kyung-sook. As the debate intensified, Nam resigned from the Munhakdongne editing committee.
Nam has earned critical and popular acclaim for his literary criticism and poetry. He won the 8th Dongsuh Literary Award for best criticism in 1995, the 9th Kim Daljin Literature Prize for best poetry in 1998, the 11th Socheon Lee Heon-gu Literary Criticism Award in 1999, the 46th Hyundae Literary Award for best criticism in 2001, the 13th Palbong Literary Criticism Award in 2002, the 15th Daesan Literary Award for best poetry in 2007, and the 22nd Daesan Literary Award for best criticism in 2014.
Nam Jin-Woo is sometimes referred to as a "pilgrim who does not stop pursuing what is sacred or mysterious." Since his first poetry collection Gipeun gose geumureul deuriura (ê¹Âì 곳ì 그물ì ëÂÂ리ì°ë¼ Cast the Net into Deep Waters), he has primarily been concerned with the transcendental sacred. He attempts to "reach the sacred by writing about the impossibility of sacredness in this unfortunate era."
Nam uses imagery such as flames, sand dunes, unexpected visits by animals, the deep hue of death, and distant sounds. Nam's work has strong religious and fatalist themes. He believes that his task as a poet is to persistently seek salvation even if it proves impossible.
1. ãÂÂê¹Âì 곳ì 그물ì ëÂÂ리ì°ë¼ãÂÂ(민ìÂÂì¬, 1990) : ì¬ÃÂÂ(문ÃÂÂëÂÂë¤, 1997)
Cast the Net into Deep Waters. Minumsa, 1990.
(second edition published by Munhakdongne in 1997)
2. ãÂÂ죽ì ìÂÂ를 ìÂÂà기ëÂÂãÂÂ(문ÃÂÂê³¼ì§Âì±ì¬, 1997)
Prayer for the Dead. Moonji, 1997.
3. ãÂÂÃÂÂì¤르ë 챠ãÂÂ(문ÃÂÂê³¼ì§Âì±ì¬, 2000)
Burning Book. Moonji, 2000.
4. ãÂÂìÂÂë²½ ì¸ ìÂÂì ì“ Ã ë§Â리ãÂÂ(문ÃÂÂê³¼ì§Âì±ì¬, 2006)
A Lion at Three in the Morning. Moonji, 2006.
5. ãÂÂì‘ÂÂì ì´ëÂÂì´ ì ÂøãÂÂ(ì°½ë¹Â, 2009)
The Dark Side of Love. Changbi, 2009.
1. ãÂÂë°Â벨ÃÂÂì ì¸ì´ãÂÂ(문ÃÂÂê³¼ì§Âì±ì¬, 1989)
The Language of Babel. Moonji, 1989.
2. ãÂÂì ì±Ã ì²ãÂÂ(민ìÂÂì¬, 1995)
Sacred Forest. Minumsa, 1995.
3. ãÂÂì²ì¼론ë ì±벽ãÂÂ(문ÃÂÂëÂÂë¤, 1999;2010)
Castle Wall of Trees. Munhakdongne, 1999 & 2010.
4. ãÂÂ그리고ì ì ìÂÂì¸ì 창조ÃÂÂë¤ó°¡Â(문ÃÂÂëÂÂë¤, 2001)
And God Created Poets. Munhakdongne, 2001.
5. ãÂÂëÂÂì¬ë¡Âì ìÂÂÃÂÂãÂÂ(문ÃÂÂëÂÂë¤, 2013)
The Poetics of Lazarus. Munhakdongne, 2013.
6. ãÂÂÃÂÂÃÂÂìÂÂì ê¿Â꾸ë¤ãÂÂ(문ÃÂÂëÂÂë¤, 2013)
Dreaming from Ruins. Munhakdongne, 2013.
1. ãÂÂì¬ÃÂÂë 죽ì ë ëÂÂì ì§Âì ì ìÂÂë¼고ÃÂÂìÂÂë¤ãÂÂ(ì´림ìÂÂ, 2000) : ì¬ÃÂÂ(문ÃÂÂëÂÂë¤, 2010)
At the Time of His Death, Orpheus Said His Profession Was a Poet. Yolimwon, 2010.
1. ãÂÂ미젠근ëÂÂì±과 ìÂÂê°Âì ìÂÂÃÂÂãÂÂ(ìÂÂ몠ì¶ÂÃÂÂ, 2001)
Aesthetic Modernity and the Poetics of the Moment. Somyung Books, 2001.
1. PO&SIE: Poésie sud-coréenne numéro 88 (French)
2. A Lion at Three in the Morning: Poems of Nam-Jin Woo. Translated by Young-Shil Cho. Homa & Sekey Books, 2017.
1. 1995: 8th Dongsuh Literary Award (criticism category)
2. 1998: 9th Kim Daljin Literature Prize (poetry category)
3. 1999: 11th Socheon Lee Heon-gu Literary Criticism Award
4. 2001: 46th Hyundae Literary Award (criticism category)
5. 2002: 13th Palbong Literary Criticism Award
6. 2007: 15th Daesan Literary Award (poetry category)
7. 2014: 22nd Daesan Literary Award (criticism category)
1. ê¹ÂìÂÂì´, ï½¢ÃÂÂì¤르ë ìÂÂìÂʑ«ÃÂÂï½£, ãÂÂìÂÂì ÂìÂÂÃÂÂã ì¬ë¦Âø, 1998.
Kim, Sui. "The Limitless of Burning Poetry." Lyric Poetry and Poetics, Summer 1998 Issue.
2. ê¹Âì§ÂìÂÂ, ï½¢ë¶Âê³¼ ì¬ë¡ÂìÂÂì àÂì¤Ã¸」, ãÂÂ문ÃÂÂê³¼ì¬ÃÂÂã ì¬ë¦Âø, 2000.
Kim, Jinsu. "The Text as Fire and Ashes." Literature and Society, Summer 2000 Issue.
3. ê¹Âì§Âì, 「미ì§Âì ì¸ì´ì ë¨ ÃÂÂëÂÂì ì§Âì¤」, ãÂÂ기ìµì ìÂÂì¬ÃÂÂãÂÂ, ì²Âë ÂìÂÂìÂÂìÂÂ, 2008.
Kim, Jin-hui. "Unknown Language and the One Truth." In The Rhetoric of Memory. Poem Sijak, 2008.
4. ì ÂëÂÂë³Â, 「무ë¤ ìÂÂìÂÂì ëÂÂê·¸ëÂÂëÂÂë 그ë¡ÂàÂì¤Ã¬ ìÂÂÃÂÂï½£, ãÂÂì² ê°Âì ÃÂÂ를 ê°Âì§ ìÂÂì ì¸ì´ãÂÂ, ì¼ÂÓ´ë¶Âì¤, 2008.
Jeong, Kkeut-byeol. "Grotesque Poetics Rattling Above a Grave." In The Language of Poetry Has a Thousand Tongues. Kephoi Books, 2008.
5. ëÂÂÑÂÂ, ï½¢ì‘ÂÂì ì´ëÂÂì´ ì Âø」, ãÂÂìÂÂìÂÂì¸ê³Âã ë´Âø, 2010.
Ra, Heeduk. "The Dark Side of Love." Poetry & World, Spring 2010 Issue.