The Blue Deer school (Cheongnokpa,) is named after a poetry collection published by three Korean poets in 1946.[1] Through the celebration of the natural beauty of their country, they heralded there the national awakening after some four decades of Japanese repression. Though the poets differ from each other in terms of poetic orientation and expression, technique and rhythm, they share the common theme of celebrating human aspirations and values.
The anthology was named after a poem by one of the participants, Park Mok-wol. From his Blue Deer, a work of pure lyricism, grows the suggested anticipation of the coming spring after the long years of occupation.
Far away stands Ch’ong un Templean old tile-roofed building. There at Cha Ha Mountainwhen spring snows melt
The elmssprout twelve-fold leaves.
In the clear eyeof a blue deer
Floatclouds.[2]
Included in this anthology were fifteen poems by Park Mok-wol, twelve by Cho Chi-hun and twelve by Pak Tu-jin.[3] The 70th anniversary of its publication was celebrated in 2016 by various events in Korea, including a public reading of the poems.[4]