Aurelia Paul is a senior year student at Boston University, studying comparative literature and Chinese. In her fortnightly column,
Student bookshelf, she shares responses to texts she's reading in her classes.
Here she discusses
Who Ate Up All the Shinga? An Autobiographical Novel by Park Wan-suh.
Park Wan-suh is a best-selling and award-winning writer from Korea. She was born in 1931 in a small village near Kaesong, a protected hamlet of no more than twenty families. Park was raised believing that "no matter how many hills and brooks you crossed, the whole world was Korea and everyone in it was Korean." But then came the Japanese Occupation, complicating her day-to-day life, and her beliefs.
Who Ate Up All the Shinga? Examines the ways in which collaboration, assimilation, and resistance intertwined within the Korean social fabric before, during, and after the Japanese Occupation. The novel is notable for Park's portrait of her mother, a sharp and resourceful widow who both resisted and conformed to stricture, becoming an enigmatic role model for her struggling daughter.
So, over to Aurelia...