About the Author
Born in Kunsan (North Cholla Province) in 1933, Ko Un is the most controversial and prolific Korean writer alive. He has published well over a hundred volumes of poetry, fiction, essays, translations, and drama. He has led a remarkable life—as a Buddhist monk, a depressive who attempted suicide, and a political activist—as well as a highly regarded writer. His poetic language is vivid and colloquial, marked by popular speech rhythms rather than by literary conventions. His intense longing for the reunification of Korea is expressed in many places and his main concern has always been to express the historic identity of the Korean people as a whole. In recent years he has gained an international reputation, and has given talks and readings in the United States, Australia, France, Holland, and Germany. Translations of his work have been published in several languages.
About the Translators
Sunny Jung (Jung Jung-sun) is known as a Zen poet. She wrote The Gateway to Zen with a forward by Seo Jung-ju. Poetry and Politics, Incorporated, the most highly respected mainstream poetry journal in South Korea, honored her with the coveted “New Poet” award. Elizabeth Bartlett, Park Tu-jin, and Park Mok-wol have served as her mentors. Currently, she teaches Korean Literature at the University of California, Santa Barbara.
Hillel Schwartz is a cultural historian and a poet who teaches on occasion at the University of California, San Diego. Author of five books on topics ranging from millenarianism to the history of the body to the culture of the copy, he has had his own scholarly work translated into six languages. His poetry has been published widely in several hundred journals and anthologies, a chapbook, and The Best American Poetry 1997.
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 978-1-932195-40-8