Kim Yang-shik
Kim Yang-shik | |
---|---|
Born | Seoul, South Korea | January 4, 1931
Alma mater | Ewha Womans University |
Occupation(s) | Poet, writer |
Awards | Padma Shri |
Korean name | |
Hangul | 김양식 |
Hanja | 金良植 |
Revised Romanization | Gim Yangsik |
McCune–Reischauer | Kim Ryangsik |
Art name | |
Hangul | 초이 |
Hanja | 初荑 |
Revised Romanization | Choi |
McCune–Reischauer | Ch'oi |
Kim Yang-shik (
The Indian connection
Kim Yang-shik was born in Seoul on January 4, 1931. At
Poetry
Kim Yang-shik began publishing her own poetry during the 1970s and has authored several collections. Her Indian connection has been fruitful, not only providing her with inspiration for such collections as "The Day Breaks of India" (1999) but also as the country from which several other translations of her work have been published. Her poems have been translated into several other languages and in 2009 there appeared another selection in Swedish translation, De är aldrig ensamma (They are never alone), followed by a French translation, India, in 2014. An essayist in addition, she has published "An Encounter with Foreign Poets" (1978), "Along the Stream of Ganges" (1990) and "Spring, Summer, Autumn and Winter" (2000).[3]
Among the literary associations to which Kim belongs are the Korean Modern Poets' Association and the Korean Women Writers' Association; she is also involved with the Korean chapter of the International
The poem "Compassion" gives an idea of Kim's individual style:
- Leaving is not simply leaving
- and staying is not simply staying.
- People and beasts and even plants:
- each stays as if leaving
- and leaves as if staying.
- There is no heaven without earth,
- neither is there earth without heaven.
- All created as one in the beginning
- remain as one endlessly.
- Likewise
- no one stays without leaving
- or leaves without staying.[4]
Works in English translation
- Bird's Sunrise & other poems, Calcutta, India (1986)
- India : selected poems by Kim Yang-Shik, Seoul (1993)
- They Are Never Lonely, translators Jin-sup Kim, Eugene W. Zeilfelder, Seoul (1998)
- The Day Breaks of India, a trilingual edition with Kim Yang-Shik's Korean originals accompanied by translations into English by Jin-sup Kim, and into Hindi by Divik Ramesh; Delhi, India (1999)
References
- ^ Indian Embassy
- ^ "Padma Awards" (PDF). Padma Awards. 2014. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 15, 2015. Retrieved November 11, 2014.
- ^ Editions Sombres Rets
- ^ Manoa 14.2 (2002-2003) p.206