Lee Geunbae Explained

Lee Geunbae
Birth Date:1 March 1940
Birth Place:Dangjin, Chungcheongnam-do, South Korea
Language:Korean
Nationality:South Korean
Module:
Child:yes
Korean name
Hangul:이근배
Rr:I Geunbae
Mr:I Kŭnpae

Lee Geunbae (; born 1 March 1940) is a South Korean sijo poet. He is known for his compositions on Korea's traditions and indigenous environments. He is one of the major contemporary sijo poets. In 2002, he was chosen as chairman of the Society of Korean Poets. He has served as the director of the Korean Headquarters of the International PEN. He is currently a creative writing professor at JEI University.

Biography

Lee Geunbae was born on March 1, 1940, in Dangjin, Chūseinan-dō, Korea, Empire of Japan. His pen name is Sacheon. In 1958 he started studying creative writing at Seorabeol Art College and practiced poetry. Before his literary debut, he had already published in 1960 his first collection Sarangeul yeonjuhaneun kkotnamu (사랑을 연주하는 꽃나무 The Flower Tree That Sings Love). He began his literary career in 1961 when he won the Kyunghyang Daily News New Writer's Award with sijo Myobimyeong (묘비명 The Epitaph), as well as the Seoul Shinmun New Writer's Contest with Byeok (벽 The Wall). And until 1964 he also had sijo as well as children's poems selected for contests from Chosun Ilbo and Don-A Ilbo. He is the only writer in Korea to have won a new writer's contest four times.[1] He was also the publisher and editor-in-chief of Hankook Munhak, and editor-in-chief of Minjokgwa munhak. He has served as the president of the Association of Korean Sijo Poets, the president of the Society of Korean Poets, the deputy director of the Korean Writers Association, and the director of the Korean Headquarters of the International PEN. He has taught poetry writing and theory on poetry at Seoul Institute of the Arts, Chugye University for the Arts, and Chung-Ang University. He is currently serving as the president of the Jiyonghoe and the Association for Commemoration of Gong Cho, and he is a creative writing professor at JEI University.[2] He has won the New Artist Award, the Garam Sijo Literary Award, the Republic of Korea Writer Award, the Joongang Sijo Grand Prize, the Hyundae Buddhist Literature Prize, the Cheong Chi-Yong Literature Prize, and the Manhae Literature Prize.[3]

Writing

Lee Geunbae's early sijos expressed affection for the mother country, his spiritual home country. By revealing the spirit of freedom based on humanism, he also displayed how sijo is a free verse form of a certain type, one that reaches the life's inner sides with emotions and rules. In the 1960s when he had debuted, there were too many poems in Korea that over-emphasized on social commentary or were difficult to understand. In such a time, Lee Geunbae's works contributed towards the revival of traditional lyricism.[4]

Also, his later works often used historical figures as subject matter, laying out ‘historical imagination’ with lyrical melody.[5] For example, in Chusareul humchida (추사를 훔치다 Stealing Chusa), by poetizing Kim Jeong-hui and Kim Byeong-yeon, two greats figures from the Joseon dynasty, he summoned the long gone tradition and beauty of the past.[6]

Meanwhile, from a formal perspective, Lee Geunbae's sijo often mixes the forms of saseol sijo and pyeong sijo. How he is not bound within one form is a result of his critical mindset that wants to restructure the past from a modern perspective, despite his attachment to the things of the past.[7]

He attempts to have the spirit of a seonbi, possessing morality and generosity in a corrupt world. However, his ultimate goal is to have a poetic spirit like a sinseon's (a Taoist hermit with mystical powers), that "listens with the eyes, sees with the nose, and talks with the ears." As such, through his tranquil sijo, he has visualized the emptiness of the world, and the nature of humanity. His works are considered as literary instances where modern society and inner humanity were explored through the traditional form of sijo.[8]

Works

Poetry collections

Awards

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://terms.naver.com/entry.nhn?docId=333715&cid=41708&categoryId=41737 The Encyclopedia of Korean Contemporary Literature
  2. http://www.msp21.co.kr/_renewal/_index.php?rlaxogud=board.php&dbbase=author&field=Z3JvdXBpbmc&numerals=18&db=author Munhaksegyesa
  3. http://terms.naver.com/entry.nhn?docId=689818&cid=41708&categoryId=41711 The Dictionary of Korean Language & Literature
  4. Yang, Minjeong et al, The Landscape of 1960s Poetry, HUFS University Press Center: 79.
  5. Lee, Jiyeop,Historical Imagination Unraveled by Melody and Emotion Yeolrin sihak, 2009.
  6. http://book.naver.com/bookdb/book_detail.nhn?bid=7406627 Naver Books
  7. http://blog.naver.com/nsunday/150070924851 Naver Blog
  8. http://book.naver.com/bookdb/book_detail.nhn?bid=7406627 Naver Books