-
2006 Seoul Young Writers’ Festival EssayKorean(한국어)
2006-04-01 / II00000001
This collection of essays from the 2006 Seoul Young Writers’ Festival contains messages from the President of LTI Korea and the Chairman of the Organizing Committee, and essays by 36 writers. The festival took place on May 7~13, 2006 in Seoul, Youngju and Andong.
-
2008 Seoul Young Writers’ Festival EssayKorean(한국어)
2005-05-07 / II00000002
This collection of essays from the 2008 Seoul Young Writers’ Festival contains essays by 40 writers under the age of 45. The festival took place on May 18~24, 2008 in Seoul, Youngju and Andong.
-
2008 Seoul Young Writers’ FestivalKorean(한국어)
2008-05-01 / II00000003
This anthology from the 2008 Seoul Young Writers’ Festival contains selected works of 40 writers under the age of 45. The festival took place on May 18~24, 2008 in Seoul, Youngju and Andong.
-
2008 Seoul International Writers’ Festival Final ReportKorean(한국어)
2008-05-19 / II00000004
This is the final report of the 2008 Seoul Young Writers’ Festival, which took place on May 18~24, 2008 in Seoul, Youngju and Andong. The final report contains an overview of the festival, information on the program and participating writers and interviews.
-
Gone, but Not ForgottenEnglish(English)
2019-06-21 / II00000119
For the purpose of generating a discourse on Korean literature and introducing Korean writers and works to general readers and experts overseas, KLN publishes book reviews by overseas scholars and publishers. This is a review of the German translation of Your Shadow Is a Monday by Kim Junghyuk.
-
_List Vol.6English(English)
2009-12-01 / II00001075
The theme of _List Vol. 6 is “Korean Cinema and Literature.” This issue sheds light on the impact of Korean literature in the history of Korean films under the subthemes “Reliving the Korean Film Renaissance (1950s-1960s), “Literary and Cinematic Imagination Rising from the Darkness (19970s-mid 1990s),” and “Novels in the Age of One-Source Multi-Usage (1990s-2010s). In addition, this issue features interviews with novelist Jo Kyung Ran and cartoonist Kim Dong Hwa, Korean publishing trends, coverage of the acceptance of Korean literature overseas, author’s notes by literary critic Hong Jungsun and novelist Kim Junghyuk, a spotlight on a literary site, and book reviews of fiction/nonfiction/children’s literature and introduces steady sellers, publishers, and trends in Korean literature to overseas readers.
-
_List Vol.12English(English)
2011-06-01 / II00001081
The theme of _List Vol. 12 is “The New Imagination Trends in Modern Korean Fiction.” Under the four subthemes “Korean history and fiction after 1987,” “from politics to ethics,” “experimenting with the imagination,” and “popular culture connects with literature,” this issue introduces 13 contemporary Korean writers (Jeong Yi Hyun, Kim Ae-ran, Jeong Seong-tae, Kim Yeonsu, Hwang Jungeun, Kim Taeyong, Pyun Hye Young, Yun Ko Eun, Han Yujoo, Kim Young-ha, Park Min-gyu, Kim Kyung-uk, and Kim Junghyuk). In addition, this issue features interviews with novelists Pyun Hye Young and Park Min-gyu, Korean publishing trends, coverage of the acceptance of Korean literature overseas, author’s notes by poet Kim Min-jeong, a spotlight on a literary site, book reviews of fiction/nonfiction/children’s literature, and an excerpt from Kim Ae-ran’s short story “A Pool of Saliva” and introduces steady sellers, publishers, and trends in Korean literature to overseas readers.
-
_List Vol.17English(English)
2012-09-01 / II00001086
The theme of _List Vol. 17 is “E-Books in Korea.” Under the four subthemes “E-Book Publication and Copyright,” “The Role of Publishers,” “Publishing E-Books: the Trend of Publishing Contents,” and the “Advent of the Age of E-Books,” this issue introduces the distribution and the historical context that led to the emergence of e-books. In addition, this issue features interviews with professor Jeong Jaeseung and writer Kim Junghyuk, Korean publishing trends, coverage of the acceptance of Korean literature overseas, a spotlight on a literary site, book reviews of fiction/nonfiction/children’s literature, and an excerpt from Lee Kiho’s At Least We Can Apologize and introduces steady sellers, publishers, and trends in Korean literature to overseas readers.
Related Resources
This is a collection of data on various Korean literature events, exhibitions and education programs hosted by LTI Korea around the world.