Bi-lingual Edition Modern Korean Literature SET 7
Bi-lingual Edition Modern Korean Literature SET 7
<¹éÄ¡°¡ µÈ ½Ä¹ÎÁö Áö½ÄÀÎ Colonial Intellectuals Turned ¡°Idiots¡±>
91 ³¯°³ – ÀÌ»ó
Wings - Yi Sang (124pages)
ISBN 979-11-5662-068-6
92 ±è °»ç¿Í T ±³¼ö – À¯Áø¿À
Lecturer Kim and Professor T - Chin-O Yu (132pages)
ISBN 979-11-5662-069-3
93 ¼Ò¼³°¡ ±¸º¸¾¾ÀÇ ÀÏÀÏ – ¹ÚÅ¿ø
A Day in the Life of Kubo the Novelist - Pak Taewon (220pages)
ISBN 979-11-5662-070-9
94 ºñ ¿À´Â ±æ - ÃÖ¸íÀÍ
Walking in the Rain - Ch¡¯oe Myǒngik (140pages)
ISBN 979-11-5662-071-6
95 ºû ¼Ó¿¡ - ±è»ç·®
Into the Light - Kim Sa-ryang (156pages)
ISBN 979-11-5662-072-3
<Çѱ¹ÀÇ ÀÒ¾î¹ö¸° ¾ó±¼ Traditional Korea¡¯s Lost Faces>
96 º½ ¢« º½ - ±èÀ¯Á¤
Spring, Spring - Kim Yu-jeong (92pages)
ISBN 979-11-5662-073-0
97 º¡¾î¸® »ï·æÀÌ - ³ªµµÇâ
Samnyong the Mute - Na Tohyang (88pages)
ISBN 979-11-5662-074-7
98 ´Þ¹ã - ÀÌÅÂÁØ
An Idiot¡¯s Delight-Yi T'ae-jun (76pages)
ISBN 979-11-5662-075-4
99 »ç¶û¼Õ´Ô°ú ¾î¸Ó´Ï – ÁÖ¿ä¼·
Mama and the Boarder-Chu Yo-sup (116pages)
ISBN 979-11-5662-076-1
100 °¹¸¶À» – ¿À¿µ¼ö
Seaside Village - Oh Yeongsu (100pages)
ISBN 979-11-5662-077-8
<Çعæ ÀüÈÄ Before and After Liberation>
101 ¼Ò¸Á - 丸½Ä
Juvesenility - Ch'ae Man-Sik (100pages)
ISBN 979-11-5662-078-5
102 µÎ ÆÄ»ê - ¿°»ó¼·
Two Bankruptcies - Yom Sang-Seop (96pages)
ISBN 979-11-5662-079-2
103 Ç®ÀÙ – ÀÌÈ¿¼®
Leaves of Grass - Lee Hyo-seok (144pages)
ISBN 979-11-5662-080-8
104 ¸Æ – ±è³²Ãµ
Barley - Kim Namch'on (196pages)
ISBN 979-11-5662-081-5
105 ²¨»ßµý ¸® – Àü±¤¿ë
Kapitan Ri - Chŏn Kwangyong (144pages)
ISBN 979-11-5662-082-2
<ÀüÈÄ Korea After the Korean War>
106 ¼Ò³ª±â - Ȳ¼ø¿ø
The Cloudburst - Hwang Sun-Won (88pages)
ISBN 979-11-5662-083-9
107 µî½ÅºÒ - ±èµ¿¸®
Tŭngsin-bul - Kim Tong-ni (104pages)
ISBN 979-11-5662-084-6
108 ¿äÇÑ ½ÃÁý – Àå¿ëÇÐ
The Poetry of John - Chang Yong-hak (168pages)
ISBN 979-11-5662-085-3
109 ºñ ¿À´Â ³¯ – ¼Õâ¼·
Rainy Days - Son Chang-sop (96pages)
ISBN 979-11-5662-086-0
110 ¿À¹ßź – À̹ü¼±
A Stray Bullet - Lee Beomseon (148pages)
ISBN 979-11-5662-087-7
Aspirin, Adalin, aspirin, Adalin, Marx, Malthus, matroos, aspirin, Adalin...
For a month my wife had fed me Adalin, tricking me into thinking they were aspirin. The box of Adalin I found in her room was clear proof.
Why did she want me to sleep all the time?
While she had me asleep, what was she doing?
-Wings, Yi sang -
On the Streetcar
at first, Kubo, couldn¡¯t find a seat. The last seat was taken by a young woman who had boarded just before him. He stands near the conductor¡¯s seat and wonders where he should go. The streetcar is bound for Dongdaemun. At which stop might happiness await him?
-A Day in the Life of Kubo the Novelist, Pak Taewon
Suddenly a vision of his daughter Nami and his son Wŏnshik came to him. He clenched his fists tightly, and his face tensed momentarily as if he were on the brink of a seizure. Then an odd smile passed across his face.
Hmm. I¡¯ve lived among those warty Japanese, made it out of the grasp of those brutish Russians, and now the Yankees—could they be much different? Revolutions may come and the nation change hands, but the way out has never been blocked for Yi Inguk. There used to be so many who seemed to outdo me from time to time. I¡¯ve made it through, but what about them?
- Kapitan Ri- Chon Kwangyong -