Choe Dooseok
Choe Dooseok is a Korean poet. Since his debut in 1980, he has continued to write poems that combine facticity with lyricism. His poems are considered compassionate toward objects, and at the same time, equipped with keen insight into reality. He argued for narrative poetics from a realist perspective.
Biography
He was born in 1956 in Damyang, Jeollanam-do Province. He debuted by publishing "Gimtongjeong " in Simsang in 1980. He was a member of a literary coterie, Owalsi, along with Kwak Jae-gu, Yun Jaecheol, Na Haecheol and Ko Kwangheon. He published his review, "Siwa rieolism in the fourth volume of Owalsi, and a long poem, "Imjingang " in the fifth volume.Over the 30 years of writing poems, he has diligently published many poetry collections including Daekkot, Imjingang, Seongekkot, Saramdeul saie kkochi pil ttae, Kkochege gireul munneunda, Tugukkot, Sumsalikkot. "When Flowers Bloom Among People" was used as lyrics of a song with the same title by singer Ahn Chi-hwan in 2004. He also worked on several reviews such as Rieolismui sijeongsin and Siwa rieolism. He has been serving as a professor of creative writing at Hanshin University. He received the Buddhist Literary Award in 2007, and the Oh Janghwan Literary Award in 2010.
Writing
Narrative and Poetry
Choe's poetry is based on the consciousness that literature needs to reflect reality and to participate in social reform. This consciousness was expressed in a form of narrative poem. He revealed his strong determination to combine poetry and narrative, songs and stories in the prologue poem "Noraewa iyagi " in his first poetry collection, Bamboo Flower.Narrative poems are realized in a form of serial poems or long poems. The title poem of Bamboo Flower consists of a series of poems describing the historical relation between the Donghak Rebellion in the late 19th century and the Gwangju Democratization Movement of the 1980s. Imjingang River is a long poem that truthfully illustrates hardships Kim Nakjung went through as a reunification activist, and his passion toward peaceful reunification of South and North Koreas. In the scope of narrative poems, poetic representation of historical figures is included. Frost on Windows contains a poem that is based on Jeon Tae-il, a workers' rights activist, and Seo Hobin, a victim of the May 18 Gwangju uprising.
Nature and Poetry
Since the late 1990s when the military dictatorship was over and democracy was in place, his poetry has turned from the narrative poems into various forms. In "Epilogue" in When Flowers Bloom Among People, he said "I want to write poems that naturally bloom like flowers." Unlike his poems of the 1980s, he used a motif from nature such as sycamore, nut pine and waterfall; lines and verses became shorter; and his empathy with nature is more highlighted. Ask Flowers for Direction illustrates his ecological imagination toward Geomnyongso, a Kalopanax and a young zelkova tree. Monkshood expresses his concerns for harmonious life between nature and human being. Flower That Breathes Life, named after a mythical flower, shows introspection on the inherently close association between nature and life.As he says that he has aspired to living in tune with the world, which is the basis of his poems, the realm of his poetry gets deeper as he desperately tries to communicate with living conditions he faces at any moment.
Works
시집
- 《대꽃》, 문학과지성사, 1984 / Daekkot, Munji, 1984
- 《임진강》, 청사, 1986 / Imjingang, Cheongsa, 1986
- 《성에꽃》, 문학과지성사, 1990 / Seongekkot, Munji, 1990
- 《사람들 사이에 꽃이 필 때》, 문학과지성사, 1997 / Saramdeul saie kkochi pil ttae Munji, 1997
- 《꽃에게 길을 묻는다》, 문학과지성사, 2003 / Kkochege gireul munneunda Munji, 2003
- 《투구꽃》, 창비, 2009 / Tugukkot, Changbi, 2009
- 《숨살이꽃》, 문학과지성사, 2018 / ''Sumsalikkot''
에세이
- 《시의 샘터에서》, 웅진북스, 2003 / Siui samteoeseo, Woongjin Books, 2003
평론집
- 《리얼리즘의 시정신》, 실천문학사, 1992 / Rieolismui sijeongsin, Literature and Practice, 1992
- 《시와 리얼리즘》, 창비, 1996 / Siwa rieolism, Changbi, 1996
Compilations
<달팽이>, 최두석, 나희덕 엮음, 《나의 대표시를 말한다》, b, 2012 / Choe Dooseok, Na Huideok. "Dalpaengi " Naui daepyosireul malhanda, b, 2012Awards
- 2007, Buddhist Literary Award ''
- 2010, Oh Janghwan Literary Award ''