This episode of the Korea Now podcast features an interview that Jed Lea-Henry conducted with Janet Lee. They speak about the Chosŏn-era ‘Tale of Chunhyang’, why this story was so popular at the time and why it remains so today, the portrayal of social stratification within this novel, the rebellious message embedded in the text, the various different source texts that exist for this story, the two key English translations that were done by the now-famous Western Missionaries Horace Allen and James Gale, how these translations changed and reinvented important aspects of the tale in the hopes of engaging Western readers with Korean culture, and indeed how they reinvented Korean cultural identity through their translations into English.
Janet Lee is an assistant professor of Korean Literature at Keimyung University in South Korea, specializing in gender, emotion, and medicine in the Chosŏn literary tradition. She received her M.A. degree at Columbia University and Ph.D. degree from University of California, Los Angeles. Her dissertation concerns the development of the literary motif of “love-sickness” (sangsa pyŏng) in late Chosŏn narratives, and it contends that love tales reveal the complex negotiations between the body and the mind, gender ideals and sexual desire, and romantic love and Confucian ideology. Her scholarly interests are focused on women’s writing, experience, and labor presented in vernacular works from the eighteenth to nineteenth centuries. She is the Managing Editor of Acta Koreana, a peer-reviewed international journal of Korean studies published in English.
*** Janet Lee’s article ‘"The Tale of Chunhyang" as Translated by Western Missionaries’ (https://www.academia.edu/42710915/_The_Tale_of_Chunhyang_as_Translated_by_Western_Missionaries).
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