Oh Sangwon () was a South Korean writer and journalist.
Life
Oh Sangwon was born on November 5, 1930, in Seoncheon, Pyeonganbuk-do, Korea. Oh graduated from Seoul National University with a B.A. in French and worked as an editorial writer for the Dong-a Ilbo. Oh died in 1985.
In 1953, his play Corroding Fragments (Nokseuneun papyeon) won the Association for New Theater (Singeuk hyeobuihoe) contest. Oh debuted as a writer in 1955 when his short story "A Respite" (Yuye) was published in the Hankook Ilbo.
Work
The Literature Translation Institute of Korea summarizes Oh's contributions to Korean literature:
French behaviorism and existentialism, which he encountered in college, strongly influenced Oh SangwonâÂÂs literary imagination. His works bear witness to the political chaos following the liberation and the tragedy of Korean War through characters that take bold actions to critique external reality. âÂÂA Betrayalâ (Moban), a story that won him 1958 Dongin Literary Prize features a terrorist who must choose between his conscience and his duty to his political organization. âÂÂA Respiteâ presents a psychological study of a soldier taken captive while trying to save another manâÂÂs life and is awaiting execution. The soldier can be taken as a prototype of a superhuman, behavioristic man who makes humanistic choice even as he confronts his own mortality. âÂÂPeriodâ (Pirieodeu), âÂÂRealityâ (Hyeonsil), and âÂÂContemptâ (Momyeol) further explore the subject of Korean War.
In the 1970s, he shifted his attention away from creative writing to focus on a career in journalism, working as a reporter and editorialist for the Dong-a Ilbo. During this time, he published fabular satires of contemporary events. Political and social fables such as âÂÂThe Old Foxâ (Neulgeun yeou), âÂÂThe King's Molarâ (Imgeumnimui eogeumni), and âÂÂThe Rabbit's Eyesâ (Tokkiui nun) are collected in Oh SangwonâÂÂs Fables (Oh Sangwon uhwa). In the 1980s, he published semi-autobiographical short stories such as âÂÂMountainsâ (San) and âÂÂThe Overlapping Pastâ (Gyeopchin gwageo). He died on December 3, 1985.
Works in translation
Works in Korean (partial)
Novels
- Records on White Papers (1958)
Short Stories
- A Betrayal
- A Respite
- Period
- Reality
- Contempt
- Mountains
- The Overlapping Past
Fables
Awards
References