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Yom Sang-seop

Born (1897-08-30)30 August 1897
Died March 14, 1963(1963-03-14) (aged 65)
Language Korean
Nationality South Korean
Citizenship South Korean
Notable works Three Generations
Notable awards Seoul City Cultural Award, Asian Liberty Literature Prize, Academy of Arts Award, Samil Culture Award
Korean name
Hangul 염상섭
Hanja
Revised Romanization Yeom Sang-seop
McCune–Reischauer Yŏm Sangsŏp
Pen name
Hangul 횡보
Hanja
Revised Romanization Hoengbo
McCune–Reischauer Hoengbo

Yeom Sang-seop (Hangul염상섭) (1897–1963) was a South Korean writer. He was a Korean novelist and freedom fighter in the early part of the 20th century. Yom was an early pioneer of modern narrative in Korea and a “writer of the period of dissatisfaction.” In this role Yom was one of the first naturalistic and realistic writers in Korean literature. Yom’s role in resistance against Japanese colonialism resulted in his being arrested (Yom, booksleeve).

Yom was born in 1897 in Seoul and studied at the High School level in Japan in 1912 and graduated Posung High School in 1915. After completing High School. Yom entered Keio University. After one semester, however, he dropped out and began a literary magazine with fellow writer Hwang Seok-u. At about this time he discovered the March 1 Independence Movement in Korea and began to plan a parallel rally in Osaka, Japan. For these efforts, Yom was arrested by the Japanese and put in prison, but subsequently acquitted on appeal (Yom, 473-4). In 1920, Yom returned to Korea and took a position as a reporter at the Dong-A Ilbo newspaper. During the 20’s Yom became a proponent of a national literature for Korea, and was one of the few writers (Hwang Sun-won being another notable example) who did not write in Japanese or publish fawning articles at the height of Japan’s colonial repression (Yom, 476), although he did return to Japan in 1926 to focus on his writing. In 1928 Yom returned to Korea, married Kim Yong-ok, and joined the Chosun Ilbo as main editor of the Arts and Science section of that paper (Yom, 476). When the Korean Academy of the Arts was founded, he was elected one of lifetime members. After a long and illustrious career, Yeom died on March 14, 1963.

Yom published his first fiction, the stories Hakjigwang and Sangwang in 1919. (Yom, booksleeve). In 1921 Yom’s story Frog in the Specimen Room was published in the journal Dawn of History, and in 1922 one of his most famous (and translated into English) works On the Eve of the Uprising was published. Yom returned to Japan and wrote the novels Two Minds and Love and Crime. While working at the Chosun Ilbo, Yom wrote a third novel, Running Wild. Perhaps Yom’s most famous work is Three Generations, a 472-page novel which was published in 1931. As was common at the time, the novel was published in serial chunks, in this case in the Chosun Ilbo. At the time, this was the only way that fiction was being published in Korea (Kim, in Yom, 473). The novel was not initially recognized as important, only being published as a book in 1948.

As time went by, Yom’s importance to Korean literature was recognized. In 1953 Yom was recognized with the Seoul Culture Award, three years later receiving the Asia Freedom Literature Award, and a year after that, in 1957, he received the National Academy of Arts’ Contribution Award. One year before he died in 1963, he was also awarded the March 1st Culture Award and the Korean President’s Medal (Yom, booksleeve).


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