Lee Kyun-young


Lee Kyun-young is a South Korean writer.

Life

Lee Kyun-young was born in 1951 in Jeollanam-do. He graduated from Hanyang University and later worked as a Professor of Korean History at Dongduk Women's University. Lee won the Yi Sang Literature Prize, awarded by the Dong-A Ilbo, in 1984. His important works include a collection of stories titled The Faraway Light and the novel The Country of Lao-Tzu and Chuang-Tzu. Sadly, in 1996 Lee died in a car crash. In English, his most famous work is The Other Side of Dark Remembrance, which was originally published in 1979 as a shorter story titled Division.
From 1986 until his early death, Lee was an editor of Historical Criticism published by Research Institute for Historical Problems. Lee primarily focused on the Korean independence movement. His work on Singanhoe, an independence group, which culminated in Study of Singanhoe, earned Lee the 8th Danjae Scholastic Award. Study of Singanhoe is considered to be the first research text that provides an unbiased view of Singanhoe. In 1993, he published a full-length novel The Country of Laozi and Zhuangzi. Another novel The Leaves Make Lights of Longing, appeared in the 1997 Spring issue of World Literature, after Lee's death. Other works include the children's books, Scary Dance and The Color of Winter Dream as well as a research work titled, Patriotic Enlightenment Movement During the Period of Daehanjeguk.
Lee's fiction has three distinctive aspects. First, his subjects and themes often focus on people who have been dispossessed and are wandering. Second the stories tend to have an autobiographical style - that is they are the life story of one man or a family. Finally, like many writers of the era, Lee's stories have a profound awareness of the painful history of Korea.

Work

Works in English

;Academic
;Novels
;Children's books
;Short story collections