Yoo Hyeonjong


Yoo Hyeonjong is a South Korean novelist whose works of dramatic historical fiction are well known in his native country.

Life

A native of Jeonju, the capital of Jeollabuk-do province, Yoo was born into a family of the Gangneung Yu lineage . With a degree in creative writing from Sorabol Arts College, in the province's former capital, Gwangju, he emerged on the literary stage when his short story, "This Insignificant Stone", received an award from the literary magazine Jayu Munhak.

Work

“This Insignificant Stone” is moving tale of wordless communication two Korean soldiers on the opposite sides of the demilitarized zone achieve through the medium of a curiously shaped stone. The work describes how an utterly ordinary and worthless object becomes endowed with great significance as it occasions contact between two people who must remain enemies. For this simple tale which nonetheless implies indirect criticism of the tragic reality of Korean division, Yoo Hyeonjong received the New Writer's Prize awarded by the journal Freedom Literature in 1961, the year he graduated from the Creative Writing Department of Sorabol College of Arts.
Yoo Hyeonjong's later works, however, move toward greater theatricality and evince panoramic scope. “Giant”, for example, features a protagonist who possesses almost super-human strength and will, and this type of larger-than-life hero makes nearly ubiquitous appearance in Yoo's historical novels. He tackled a wide range of characters and events in these lengthy sagas. Wildfire deals with rebels of the Donghak Movement toward the end of Joseon Dynasty; Yeongaesomun depicts the heroic feats of Yeongaesomun, the famed general from the Goguryeo Kingdom; the checkered lives of itinerant acting troupe is the subject of Namsadang. In addition, he has written accounts of historical figures such as Goryeo monk and geomancer Myocheong, Silla period sea merchant Jang Bogo, mid-Joseon bandit Lim Kkeok-jeong, and late-Joseon painter Jang Seung-eop. Yoo Hyeonjong's penchant for high drama has led him to become a capable playwright as well: he has written plays Tale of an Yangban and A Puppeteer for Our Times. Yoo Hyeonjong received Contemporary Literature Prize in 1969 and Korean Creative Writing Prize in 1976.

Works in Korean