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    ,imageNo : 5668,tLanguage : null,oLanguage : null,newsLanguage : CO-LAN-ENG,isBuy : null,isUnknownAuthor : null,author : Yoon Tae-ho,authName : 윤태호,publishedYear : null,classificationList : null,type : null,version : null,romanTitle : null,isbn : null,issuedDate : January 23, 2016,journalName : Korean Literature in Translation,startDate : null,endDate : null,onOff : null,programType : null,country : null,goingEvent : null,groupNo : null,recordLanguage : null,recordNumber : null,createStartDate : null,groupLanguage : null,itemCount : null,groupNumber : null,reviewLanguage : null,enewsDivisionCd : CO-COT-DIV-ENE-ENE,typeTag : null,keyword : null,reviewer : null} -->
  • Noirish Korean Graphic Novel, “MOSS”, Comes to the HuffPost
    English(English) Article

    Korean Literature in Translation / January 23, 2016

    Bruce and Ju-Chan Fulton have been translating a graphic novel by Yoon Taeho called MOSS on the Huffington Post. As far as I can determine,this is the first Korean graphic novel to be published in English translation in a major U. S. media outlet. It is the story of semi-reclusive Ryu Haeguk returning to his hometown upon his father’s death, deciding to stay there, and then becoming increasingly suspicious about his father’s death and the town in general.   Source: http://www.ktlit.com/korean-graphic-novel-comes-to-the-huffpost/

  • 'Operation Chromite' wins Grand Prize at BICOF
    English(English) Article

    Korea Times / July 27, 2015

    Cartoonist Yoon Tae-ho, best known for smash hit "manhwa" (comic book) "Misaeng," will receive the grand prize at this year's Bucheon Manhwa Awards for his recent work "Operation Chromite."

  • Korean literature
    English(English) Article

    The Guardian Books Podcast / March 28, 2014

    As Korea comes to London, with a star turn as the 2014 market focus at next month's London Book Fair, the Books podcast travels right to the source to investigate the country and its literature.

  • South Korea: Writing on the edge
    English(English) Article

    The Telegraph / April 01, 2014

    The most famous Koreans in the world are two chubby men in their thirties: Kim Jong-un, the North Korean dictator, and Psy, the South Korean singer famous for Gangnam Style. Each is a perfect national stereotype: the mad communist and the outlandish K-pop star. On a visit to South Korea to meet writers, cartoonists and ordinary people, I hoped to get a wider perspective.