Yi Seongbok
Yi Seongbok (Korean: 이성복, born June 4, 1952) is a South Korean poet.[1] LifeYi Seongbok was born on June 4, 1952, in Gyeongsangbuk-do, Korea.[2] Yi earned both his M.A. and B.A. from Seoul National University and has taught French Literature at Keimyung University in Daegu.[3] CareerYi Seongbok's poetry evokes events and landscapes unfolding above a horizon of unlimited interpretive possibilities. As Kim Hyeon stated of Yi's poetry, "It vastly expands its meaning to permit endless questions, not only on an individual or private level, but on a collective and public one as well."[4] Yi has attracted attention for his imaginative and multi-layered poetry which features European influences including Baudelaire, Kafka and Nietzsche and often attacks the corruption, hypocrisy, and perversion of the modern world.[5] Yi Seongbok's poetry suggests that all things exist in relation to other things, and that there is no core or isolated act. All binary categories—the collective versus individual or the social versus the ontological—are simultaneously one. But Yi's poetry does not deny opposition itself. Rather, through such distinctions, his poetic world reads more dynamically, and represents the overcoming of life's pain with the strength gained through the exchange of meanings from opposing categories[6] Selected worksWorks in Korean (partial)
Works in translation
Awards
References
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