Synopses & Reviews
Poetry. Asian Studies. Born in South Korea in 1941, Chiha Kim was first imprisoned in 1964 and sentenced to death in 1974 for writing poetry that provoked the military government of Chunghee Park. Worldwide efforts to save him resulted in his sentence being commuted in 1980. A legendary figure in South Korea, Chiha Kim won the Lotus Ptize, generally regarded as the Third World's Nobel Prize. HEART'S AGONY gathers poetry from all phases of his career, including those poems that lead to his imprisonment and torture and those written from prison. Author of eight volumes of poetry, Chiha Kim was nominated for the Nobel Prize in both Peace and Literature in 1975. Translated by Won-Chung Kim and James Han.
Synopsis
"In the back alley at daybreak¶I write you name, O democracy"-Chiha Kim
About the Author
Won-Chung Kim is a professor of English Literature at Sungkyunkwan University in Seoul, Korea. He is the co-translator of Heart's Agony by Chiha Kim and is currently translatiing an anthology of Korean nature poets.