바로가기메뉴

본문 바로가기 주메뉴 바로가기

The Review of Korean Studies

Continued Journey: Women’s Travel Kasa in Early Twentieth Century Korea

The Review of Korean Studies / The Review of Korean Studies, (P)1229-0076; (E)2773-9351
2023, v.26 no.2, pp.77-102
https://doi.org/10.25024/review.2023.26.2.004
Ji-Eun Lee (Washington Univerrsity in St. Louis)
  • Downloaded
  • Viewed

Abstract

This paper uses “A Travel to Diamond Mountains” (1930) and its author Jo Aeyeong (1911–2000) to explore gender and modernity, community and individuality, and distinctions between tradition and modern in a literary genre. It starts by juxtaposing Jo and her contemporaries, especially Baek Sinae (1908–1939), to examine the complexities of a woman writer situating herself in the early twentieth century. Noting the contexts and opportunities that affected each woman’s path forward, it challenges the usefulness of established stereotypes or slogans such as “New Women” and “Wise Mother Good Wife” in understanding this era. The paper then reads Jo’s travelogue alongside other travelogues by women, including those communally written in kasa form. In doing so, it complicates the implicit contrast between tradition and modern and illuminates changes to the “traditional” form of kasa. Along with Jo’s “Diamond Mountains,” women writers and their writings featured in this paper as a whole embody a moment of adaptation, flourishing, and decline within the evolution of women’s literature in Korea.

keywords
kasa, Jo Aeyeong, Baek Sinae, travelogue

The Review of Korean Studies