Kim Sum Explained

Kim Sum
Native Name:김숨
Native Name Lang:ko
Birth Date:July 23, 1974
Birth Place:Bangeojin, Ulsan, South Korea
Occupation:Novelist
Language:Korean
Nationality:South Korean
Citizenship:South Korean
Alma Mater:Daejeon University
Genres:-->
Subjects:-->
Notablework:-->
Spouses:-->
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Module:
Hangul:김숨
Rr:Gim Sum
Mr:Kim Sum
Othername1:Legal name
Hangul1:김수진
Rr1:Gim Sujin
Mr1:Kim Sujin
Child:yes
Portaldisp:on

Kim Sum[1] (born Kim Sujin, 23 July 1974) is a South Korean writer, best known as the author of One Left (Korean: 한명, 2016), a novel dealing with the issue of Korean comfort women in the Imperial Japanese Army.

Life

Kim Sum was born in 1974 at a seaside town in Bangeojin, Ulsan, South Korea. When she was six, her father went to the Middle East for a manual labor job, leaving the rest of the family to move into her grandfather's house in Geumsan County, South Chungcheong Province, where she ended up spending her childhood. Upon entering high school, she joined a literature club, the Cheong-un Literary Society, and dabbled in writing poetry. In 1997 she published her first short story, "On Slowness" (Korean: 느림에 대하여), in the Daejeon Ilbo, which won their New Writer's Award. Kim said she had written the story because she wanted to experiment with longer pieces of writing, rather than just poetry.[2] A year later in 1998 she published another short story, "Time in the Middle Ages" (Korean: 중세의 시간), which won the Munhakdongne New Writer Award, and Kim decided to become a writer.

After graduating from university, Kim Sum worked as a proofreader for a newspaper outside of Seoul, and then as an editor for a publishing house for many years.

Career

Kim Sum debuted as a writer when some of her short stories were selected for publications by the Daejeon Ilbo in 1997 and Munhakdongne in 1998. Known for her "elaborate descriptions and aesthetic style" and "vivid allegories",[3] Kim Sum has been a prolific writer since her debut, publishing numerous short story collections and novels. Many of her works, particularly more recent novels such as One Left (Korean: 한명) or L's Sneakers (Korean: L의 운동화), critically examine modern and contemporary Korean history and related topics, such as Korean independence from Imperial Japan, the Korean War, South Korean democratization, and more. While One Left (Korean: 한명) tells the story of Korean comfort women who were sexually abused by Imperial Japanese soldiers, L's Sneakers (Korean: L의 운동화) retells the story of student activist Lee Han-yeol, whose injuries and later death strongly influenced the June Democratic Struggle of 1987. Both novels focus on more recent historical events that have been critical to forming a national identity amongst South Koreans.

Kim Sum is the recipient of multiple literary recognitions, including the Contemporary Literature (Hyundae Munhak) Award, the Daesan Literary Awards for fiction, the Yi Sang Literary Award, and the Dongri Literature Prize. Several of her works have been translated into other languages, including One Left, which was longlisted for the International Dublin Literary Award in 2022.[4]

Works in Korean

Works in translation

Awards

Notes and References

  1. Pronounced to rhyme with "boom."
  2. Book: Kim, Soom. The Night Nobody Returns Home (아무도 돌아오지 않는 밤). ASIA Publishers. 2014. Seoul. 130–134.
  3. Kim. So-yeon. Kim. Jeong-hwan. Baek. Ji-yeon. Spring 2016. 이 계절에 주목할 신간들. Changbi. 350.
  4. News: Doyle. Martin. Susanna Clarke, David Diop and four Irish authors on Dublin Literary Award longlist. 2022-02-06. The Irish Times. en.