Park Jeong-dae


Park Jeong-dae is a South Korean writer.

Life

Park Jeong-dae was born in 1965 in Jeongsan Gangwon-do, South Korea. He is a member of the poetic group the "International radical poetry" group. Hwang is well known in Korea for dressing casually - as a child his mother dressed him in a suit for the first day of school and he was so severely taunted that he refuses to wear formal clothes and, in his own words, has “a spirit of resistance and a desire to live freely.”
Park entered the Department of Korean Literature at Korea University in 1984, but had to take time off from college to attend to his grandmother who suffered from leukemia. During this period Park wrote a number of short stories and poems, and after his grandmother's death, immediately entered Korea's compulsory military service for men. Twenty-seven months later, upon his exit, he re-enrolled in college and made his debut in 1990 with six poems including “The Aesthetics of Candlelight.”
Park has served in the Korea Teacher's Union as well as serving as the editor of its monthly newsletter, Magnolia Report.

Work

Park was a member of the so-called "April 19 generation"
and the Korea Literature Translation Institute summarizes his contribution to Korean literature:
Park work has been described as using "idiosyncratic language to express the gloomy existential reality hidden behind the age of consumer capitalism."

Awards

Park has won two South Korean literary prizes, the 14th Kim Dal-jin Literature Prize and the 19th Sowol Poetry Prize.

Works in Korean

A partial list of works includes;