Mourning and Melancholy in The 1990s and The 2000s Korean Novels—Focusing on Yoon Dae-nyeong and Kim Hoon’s Works
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Mourning and Melancholy and the 1990s in Korea
2.1. Mourning and Melancholy
2.2. The 1990s in Korea
3. Yoon Dae-nyeong and Mourning
3.1. The Sensibility of the 1990s
The world is divided into this side and that side, and you have just come to that side right now.
It gradually began to dawn on me that I had been existing in a very strange place, not where I was supposed to be. In the desert of life, on the outskirts of existence.
I barely managed to tell her that I wanted to go back from now on.
Her face flickered for a second in the candlelight, and in that tiny moment, I was dimly aware of the night in Jeju Island when I first met her. Spring, rape blossoms, geese, sweetfish, the moon…… these things. I met her in the midst of these things. Anyway, my thoughts had reached that far, so I mustered up the courage to tell her. Get rid of the falsehoods, the deceit, the shell desires, and this sleepless age.
3.2. Mourning as Resignation
4. Kim Hoon and Melancholy
4.1. Nostalgia for the Thing Unimaginable
4.2. Identification, Sublimation, and New Ego Ideal
5. Creative Melancholy or the Utopia of the Not Yet
6. Conclusions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | At the beginning of his article, Freud makes clear the limitations of his material. He states that melancholy has many different causes and forms, so it would be nearly impossible to try to group them together into a single unity. For this reason, Freud says his material is limited to a few cases that are clearly psychogenic in nature, as opposed to stemming from physical causes. In the context of his paper as a whole, we can assume that by “psychogenic nature”, he means melancholy as a result of the experience of loss. Therefore, his limitation is consistent with the purpose of this paper (Freud 1957, p. 243). |
2 | Usually, han is understood to stem from Korea’s particular historical and ethnic background. Lee Hyon-u defines han as an “indigenous sentiment of pain and regret” and says it is a “collective symbol of Korean people” (Gunnars 2024, p. 450). Boye Lafayette De Mente’s position is not that different. De Mente summarizes han as a result of Koreans having had to endure the feudalistic form of government imposed on them from the dawn of their history until the last decades of the twentieth century (Gunnars 2024, p. 450). Sandra So Hee Chi Kim says, “while han originated under the contradictions of coloniality and spread through the Korean diaspora”, it is “an affect that encapsulates the grief of historical memory” (S. S. H. C. Kim 2017). In contrast to the discussion of the specificity and negativity of han, there is also a discussion of the universality and positivity of han. From this perspective, han is a universal sentiment shared by all oppressed people. Andrew Sung Park emphasizes the universality of han by the term “World han”. According to him, han is the effect of the oppressed and “the han of the victims of sinful action”, and at that point, it becomes “more universalized experience” (Gunnars 2024, p. 468). And some researchers say it means hope, not just negativity. For example, Park Kyong-ni says, “han has generally been understood as a sort of resentment. But I think it means both sadness and hope at the same time”. Kim Hye-jin also emphasizes that there is a kind of han which consists of fervent hope rather than resentment toward others (H.-j. Kim 2012, pp. 168–69). |
3 | He actually stayed in a Buddhist temple more than six months after finishing his military service, and he says he was so immersed in Buddhist thought that it changed his outlook on life (Yoon 2001, p. 326). It is probably no coincidence, then, that so many of his early works are set in Buddhist temples. Even The legend of March starts with the sentence, “Thus I have heard”. As is well known, some Buddhist Sutras, such as the Diamond Sutra, start with this sentence. |
4 | According to the Axial Age discussion, Confucianism, Buddhism, and Christianity are all religions that emerged as transcendence emerged during the so-called Axial Age, so Confucianism is also based on transcendence (Jaspers 1965, pp. 1–22; Bellah 2012, pp. 399–480). However, such transcendence in Confucianism, unlike Christian transcendence, is more of an “immanent transcendence” (Y.-S. Lee 2016, pp. 12–26). Dao, which is both “the elementary, abstract driving force of the universe, and the concrete, intimate path of every human being”, is the representative notion of this immanent transcendence (Rošker 2014, p. 348). |
5 | By the time Memories of Comb-Pattern Pottery was published in Korea, the idea of a huge building collapsing was more a reflection of reality than imagination. In 1994, South Korea saw part of Seongsu Great Bridge over the Han River collapse, and in 1995, the country experienced the collapse of a Sam-poong department store building. The department store collapsed in June 1995, and the novel was published in August. |
6 | In particular, the film Roaring Currents (2014), about Yi’s first battle with the Japanese after his release from prison, remains the most-watched movie in the entire history of Korean cinema. |
7 | In fact, the Battle of Noryang, where Yi Sunsin died, could have been avoided if he had wanted to. For, before Noryang Battle, Yi knew the Japanese navy was in the process of retreating due to the death of Toyotomi Hideyoshi, and there was no need to follow them and fight. Kim Hoon hints at the reason why Yi Sunsin chased the retreating enemy to his death through Yi Sun-sin’s words: “I was more afraid of the enemy that was going away than the enemy that was coming”. He does not hide the reason for this counterintuitive statement, saying “The enemy seemed to complete the meaninglessness of the world before my eyes by retreating”. The fear that Yi feels at this point may be the fear from what Freud calls an “open wound” and Lacan calls “the void of the real” (Freud 1957, p. 253). |
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Bae, Y. Mourning and Melancholy in The 1990s and The 2000s Korean Novels—Focusing on Yoon Dae-nyeong and Kim Hoon’s Works. Religions 2025, 16, 460. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16040460
Bae Y. Mourning and Melancholy in The 1990s and The 2000s Korean Novels—Focusing on Yoon Dae-nyeong and Kim Hoon’s Works. Religions. 2025; 16(4):460. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16040460
Chicago/Turabian StyleBae, Yonghee. 2025. "Mourning and Melancholy in The 1990s and The 2000s Korean Novels—Focusing on Yoon Dae-nyeong and Kim Hoon’s Works" Religions 16, no. 4: 460. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16040460
APA StyleBae, Y. (2025). Mourning and Melancholy in The 1990s and The 2000s Korean Novels—Focusing on Yoon Dae-nyeong and Kim Hoon’s Works. Religions, 16(4), 460. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16040460