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The Routledge Companion to Korean Literature consists of 35
chapters written by leaders in the field, who explore significant
topics and who have pioneered innovative approaches. The collection
highlights the most dynamic current scholarship on Korean
literature, presenting rigorous literary analysis,
interdisciplinary methodologies, and transregional thinking so as
to provide a valuable and inspiring resource for researchers and
students alike. This Companion has particular significance as the
most extensive collection to date of English-language articles on
Korean literature; it both offers a thorough intellectual
engagement with current scholarship and addresses a broad range of
topics and time periods, from premodern to contemporary. It will
contribute to an understanding of literature as part of a broad
sociocultural process that aims to put the field into conversation
with other fields of study in the humanities and social sciences.
While presenting rigorous and innovative academic research that
will be useful to graduate students and researchers, the chapters
in the collection are written to be accessible to the average
upper-level undergraduate student and include only minimal use of
academic jargon. In an effort to provide substantially helpful
material for researching, teaching, and learning Korean literature,
this Companion includes as an appendix an extensive list of English
translations of Korean literature.
Translation's Forgotten History investigates the meanings and
functions that translation generated for modern national
literatures during their formative period and reconsiders
literature as part of a dynamic translational process of
negotiating foreign values. By examining the triadic literary and
cultural relations among Russia, Japan, and colonial Korea and
revealing a shared sensibility and literary experience in East Asia
(which referred to Russia as a significant other in the formation
of its own modern literatures), this book highlights translation as
a radical and ineradicable part-not merely a catalyst or
complement-of the formation of modern national literature.
Translation's Forgotten History thus rethinks the way modern
literature developed in Korea and East Asia. While national canons
are founded on amnesia regarding their process of formation,
framing literature from the beginning as a process rather than an
entity allows a more complex and accurate understanding of national
literature formation in East Asia and may also provide a model for
world literature today.
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