[KS] Penn State IKS talk series: Kyung Hyun Kim, Jan. 22, 7-8 pm on Han Kang's We do not Part (online)
Jooyeon Rhee
jooyeonrhee at gmail.com
Mon Jan 5 14:39:20 EST 2026
*Penn State Institute for Korean Studies Queer Temporalities, Virtual
Trees, and Post-Trauma in Han Kang’s “We Do Not Part ”(2021) January 22 ,
7:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. (Eastern Time, online)*
*Click here
<https://psu.zoom.us/meeting/register/nuShttGcQzO_iiEFR0fasA#/registration> to
register *
*Description*
Han Kang’s most recent novel *We Do Not Part* (Chakpyŏl haji annŭnda)
begins when the writer Kyungha visits her friend Inseon, who is a patient
at a hospital in Seoul that specializes in surgical wound closures. Inseon,
a documentary filmmaker, suffered a traumatic injury when she accidentally
sliced the tips of two of her fingers with an electric saw while preparing
trees to be planted in memory of the victims of the Jeju Massacre of 1948.
Using same-sex friendship and plant and animal care to engage in a
discussion of historical violence and trauma is a novel approach within the
context of Korean literature. The intimate relationship formed in Han’s
novel not only distinguishes them from the prevailing culture of
heteronormative companionship but also represents, through a multi-temporal
and spectral mode, a possible affirmation of what Elizabeth Freeman
describes as ‘chrononormativity.’ This talk will explore how Han imagines
the virtual pastoralism and how it aligns with Gilles Deleuze and Félix
Guattari concept of the ‘rhizomatic’—a structure not bound by a linear
order of time and historical continuity.
*Kyung Hyun Kim* is currently professor and chair in the Department of East
Asian Studies, UC Irvine. He has worked with internationally renowned film
directors such as Hong Sang-soo, Lee Chang-dong and Marty Scorsese. Prof.
Kim is author of *Virtual Hallyu: Korean Cinema of the Global Era, The
Remasculinization of Korean Cinema*, and *Hegemonic Mimicry: Korean Popular
Culture of 21st Century*, all of them published by Duke University Press,
and a Korean-language novel *entitled In Search of Lost G* (Ireo beorin
G-reul chajaso, 2014) about a Korean mother combing through the US in
search of her missing son from his Massachusetts prep school. He has
coproduced and co-scripted two award-winning feature films *Never
Forever *(2007)
and *The Housemaid* (2010, remake of Kim Ki-young’s classic from 1960). He
has also written *The Mask Debate*, his first theatre screenplay, which
premiered in February 2021 through UCI’s Illuminations: Chancellor’s
Initiative in Arts and Drama YouTube channel. He volunteers as the theater
director for Being Built Together (BBT), a non-profit organization that
supports Korean American parents with children on spectrum.
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://koreanstudies.com/pipermail/koreanstudies_koreanstudies.com/attachments/20260105/2adb1362/attachment.html>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: Kyung Hyun Kim.pdf
Type: application/pdf
Size: 634994 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <http://koreanstudies.com/pipermail/koreanstudies_koreanstudies.com/attachments/20260105/2adb1362/attachment.pdf>
More information about the Koreanstudies
mailing list