Shin Dong-yup (poet)

Shin Dong-yup
Born (1930-08-18)August 18, 1930
Buyeo, South Chungcheong, Korea
Died April 7, 1969(1969-04-07) (aged 38)
Seoul
Occupation Poet
Nationality South Korea
Genre Poetry
Notable awards Order of Cultural Merit (Silver crown)
Spouse In Byung-sun
Korean name
Hangul 신동엽
Hanja 申東曄
Revised Romanization Sin Dongyeop
McCune–Reischauer Sin Tongyŏp
Pen name
Hangul 석림
Hanja 石林
Revised Romanization Seongnim
McCune–Reischauer Sŏngnim
This is a Korean name; the family name is Shin.

Shin Dong-yup (August 18, 1930 – April 4, 1969) was a Korean poet.[1]

Life

Early life

Shin Dong-yup was born on August 18, 1930 in Buyeo, South Chungcheong Province, Korea. In 1944, he graduated from Buyeo Elementary School at the head of his class and then entered Jeonju Normal School. The tuition, room and board were covered by the government. According to the book, "National Poet Shin Dong-yup" by the poet Kim Eung-gyo, it was his father Shin Yeon-sun who discovered his talent for writing.[2] Despite their poverty, his father taught him how to write when he was 6 years old.

School life

In 1948, Shin Dong-yup was expelled as a consequence of student protest against Syngman Rhee, and in particular for disagreeing with the South Korean president's land reform policy and inaction on liquidating pro-Japanese assets. He was transferred to an elementary school in Buyeo, as he was certified to teach even though he was expelled from the Normal School. However, he quit his job and entered Dankook University, majoring in history. His father was a judicial scrivener but he could not support his son financially with his low pay, so he had to sell his farm.

Korean War

Shin Dong-yup had to return to his hometown when the Korean War broke out in 1950. The North Korean People's Army took over Buyeo on July 15, 1950. The North Korean People's army intended to fulfill the practice of Communism by land reform. Shin Dong-yup was not interested in political issues, but he was employed by the Democratic and National Youth Alliance and worked there until late September 1950. The army exploited his knowledge for organization and business. He agreed to the idea of Communism regarding social reforms, although he was still not a communist but an anarchist. He was drafted into the National Defense Corps in late 1950. After the dissolution of the army, he caught liver distoma from eating crabs.

Debut as a writer

In 1953, Shin Dong-yup applied to become an air force candidate and passed. However, after graduation from Dankook University, he remained unassigned to a billet. He then moved to Donam-dong, Seongbuk-gu, Seoul and opened a secondhand bookstore near his home. At that time, Shin Dong-yup met his wife In Byung-sun who was a senior at Ewha Girls' High School.[3] He married In Byung-sun and they returned to his hometown. In Byung-sun opened a boutique in Buyeo to overcome poverty, and Shin Dong-yup was newly assigned to Joosan Agriculture High School in Boryeong, South Chungcheong Province. He quit teaching because of tuberculosis, and fell into reading and writing after he sent his wife and children to stay with his wife's parents. In 1959, he won The Chosun Ilbo annual spring literary contest with <The Talking Ploughman’s Earth> and he made his debut as a writer under his pen name, Seok lim.[4] He recovered from tuberculosis and started working at 'Education Criticism Publisher' in Seoul. He wrote <Student Revolution collection of poems> and protested in the April Revolution.[5] This is why Shin Dong-yup is often referenced as the 'April Revolution poet' by many writers. He was able to write 'Who Said Who Looked Up At The Sky' and 'Husk, Be Gone' based on his experiences in the April Revolution.[6] In 1961, he was hired as a teacher for an evening section at the Myung-Sung Girls' High School, where he immersed himself in writing poems. He graduated from Konkuk University's graduate school with a master's degree in Korean Literature in 1964. In 1963, he published a poetry collection <Asanyeo> and an epic poem <Keumkang>. His liver distoma worsened, and this eventually turned into liver cancer. He died at age 38 on April 7, 1969.

Education

Poem

Shin Dong-yup published many poems such as Husk, be gone, which criticized the opportunists swept up by democratic power and also <March>, <Farm>, and <The sky we saw>. He wrote epic poems <The Talking Ploughman’s Earth>, <Woman's life>, and more than 10 critiques. In 1989, his poem <On the hills and mountains> was included in middle school textbooks.

The following is a Korean-English translation of his most famous poem.

껍데기는 가라

껍데기는 가라.
사월도 알맹이만 남고
껍데기는 가라.

껍데기는 가라
동학년(東學年) 곰나루의,
그 아우성만 살고
껍데기는 가라.

그리하여, 다시
껍데기는 가라.

이곳에선, 두 가슴과 그곳까지 내논
아사달 아사녀가
중립의 초례청 앞에 서서
부끄럼 빛내며
맞절할지니



껍데기는 가라.
한라에서 백두까지
향그러운 흙가슴만 남고
그, 모오든 쇠붙이는 가라.[1]

  1. ^ Sin Tong-yŏp (2013). 껍데기는 가라 [Kkŏptegi nŭn kara] (in Korean) (1-p'an. ed.). ISBN 978-89-98047-52-8. 
 

Husk, be gone

Husk, be gone;
April, let your husk
go and your grain remain.

Husk, be gone;
Let only the shouting
of the Tonghak revolution
remain, its husk gone.

And again, husk, be gone
from this land

in which a native lad meets his lass,
heart to heart,
free and easy;
they will welcome each other
for the marriage of minds
in the peace hall
of neutrality.

Husk, be gone
from Mount Halla in the south
to Mount Paektu in the north;
Let all glinting metals go
and only sweet earth remain.[1]

  1. ^ Kim, Jaihiun (c. 1994). Modern Korean Poetry. Jain Publishing Company. 

The government prohibited the sale of the book immediately after it was published, as it was a symbolical poetry of democratization.

Work

After death

The Shin Dong-yup Prize for Literature

The Shin Dong-yup creation fund was raised in 1982. The Shin Dong-yup Prize for Literature is granted every year.[9]

Shin Dong-yup literary house

Shin Dong-yup literary house was opened near Shin Dong-yup's birthplace on May 3, 2013.

Prize

References

  1. "신동엽" [Shin Dong-yup]. terms.naver.com (in Korean). Retrieved 2015-11-05.
  2. Kim Ŭng-gyo (2011). 신동엽 (사랑과 혁명의 시인) [Sin Tong-yŏp: sarang kwa hyŏngmyŏng ŭi siin] (in Korean) (Ch'op'an. ed.). Sŏul: Kŭl Nurim. ISBN 8963271412.
  3. Choi, Jae-bong (March 2, 2006). "'시인 신동엽' 펴낸 부인 인병선씨 – 이 책으로 남편의 그늘과 '이혼'입니다" (in Korean). The Hankyoreh.
  4. Seo, Dae-suk (2006). 한국의 고전을 읽는다 1 (고전문학 상, 신화ㆍ민담ㆍ여행기) [Han'guk ŭi kojŏn ŭl ingnŭnda] (in Korean) (1-p'an. ed.). Seoul: Hyumŏnisŭt'ŭ. ISBN 9788958621300.
  5. Choi, Young-jun (April 13, 2006). "4.19 그날, 시인 신동엽도 거리에 있었다" (in Korean). NoCut News.
  6. Chang Sŏk-chu (2009). 나는 문학이다 (이광수에서 배수아까지 111명) [Na nŭn munhak ida: Yi Kwang-su esŏ Pae Su-a kkaji 111] (in Korean) (Ch'ŏtp'an. ed.). Goyang: Namu Iyagi. ISBN 9788990976086.
  7. Sin Tong-yŏp (2002). 신동엽 전집 [Sin Tong-yŏp chŏnjip] (in Korean) (Chŭngbo-p'an. ed.). Seoul: Ch'angjak-kwa pip'yŏngsa. ISBN 8936410105.
  8. Shin, Dong-yup (1989). 누가 하늘을 보았다 하는가 (신동엽 시전집) [Nuga hanŭl ŭl poatta hanŭn'ga: Sin Tong-yŏp si sŏnjip.] (in Korean) (Ch'op'an. ed.). Sŏul: Ch'angjak kwa Pip'yŏngsa. ISBN 8936420208.
  9. Gwon Eun-jeong (March 16, 2006). "권은정의 인터뷰 무제한/'시인 신동엽' 펴낸 부인" (in Korean). The Hankyoreh.
  10. Noh, Hyung-suk (October 19, 2003). "문화예술계 유공자 발표" (in Korean). The Hankyoreh.

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