Ikaino’s Afterlives: The Legacies of Landscape in the Fiction of Kim Yujeong

IF 0.2 Q4 AREA STUDIES
J. Clark
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract:This article examines the works of Kim Yujeong as a contemporary response to Ikaino literature, a subgenre of Zainichi Korean literature that flourished from the 1950s–1980s. Ikaino is the old name of the neighborhood of Osaka that was and remains the area of Japan with the largest population of Zainichi Koreans. Ikaino’s origins as a settlement of Korean migrant laborers in the 1920s and its official erasure from Osaka city maps in 1973 have often been mythologized within Zainichi Korean fiction and poetry. I read Kim Yujeong’s short stories “Tanpopo” (2000), “Murasame” (2002), and “Tamayura” (2015), which feature working women protagonists traversing Ikaino’s borders, as contemporary works of Ikaino literature that interrogate the Zainichi community’s cultural and historical understandings of the entangled geographies of Japan and the two Koreas. I argue that Kim portrays Ikaino landscapes as spaces constituted through their residents’ collective imaginings of Jeju Island and North Korea. Kim also subverts our expectations of multilingualism in Zainichi literature through the use of local dialect in her representation of Japanese residents of Ikaino. Throughout her work, she seeks to both shed light on the multiple structures of oppression that face Zainichi women living in the Ikaino area today, and critique the way those women have been represented in prior works of Zainichi literature.
伊基诺的来世:金玉静小说中的景观遗产
摘要:金玉贞的作品是对20世纪50年代至80年代兴盛于韩国再日文学的一个亚流派“伊风文学”的当代回应。Ikaino是大阪附近地区的旧称,那里曾经是日本在日朝鲜人最多的地区。在日韩国小说和诗歌中,常被神话化的是,在20世纪20年代,伊基诺是韩国移民劳工的一个定居点,并于1973年被官方从大阪城市地图上抹去。我读了金玉贞(Kim Yujeong)的短篇小说《Tanpopo》(2000)、《Murasame》(2002)和《Tamayura》(2015),它们以穿越伊合野边界的职业女性为主角,作为伊合野文学的当代作品,质疑在日社群对日本和朝韩两国纠缠在一起的地理环境的文化和历史理解。我认为,金将伊合野的风景描绘成居民对济州岛和朝鲜的集体想象所构成的空间。金还颠覆了我们对在日文学多语言化的期望,在她对伊合野日本居民的表现中使用了当地方言。在她的作品中,她试图揭示今天生活在伊合野地区的在日女性所面临的多重压迫结构,并批评这些女性在以前的在日文学作品中所表现的方式。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
11
期刊介绍: Published twice a year under the auspices of the Kyujanggak Institute for Korean Studies at Seoul National University, the Seoul Journal of Korean Studies (SJKS) publishes original, state of the field research on Korea''s past and present. A peer-refereed journal, the Seoul Journal of Korean Studies is distributed to institutions and scholars both internationally and domestically. Work published by SJKS comprise in-depth research on established topics as well as new areas of concern, including transnational studies, that reconfigure scholarship devoted to Korean culture, history, literature, religion, and the arts. Unique features of this journal include the explicit aim of providing an English language forum to shape the field of Korean studies both in and outside of Korea. In addition to articles that represent state of the field research, the Seoul Journal of Korean Studies publishes an extensive "Book Notes" section that places particular emphasis on introducing the very best in Korean language scholarship to scholars around the world.
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