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Anthropology of power and passion, active nihilism: theme analysis on Sung, Suk-je's novelAnthropology of power and passion, active nihilism: theme analysis on Sung, Suk-je's novel

Other Titles
Anthropology of power and passion, active nihilism: theme analysis on Sung, Suk-je's novel
Authors
Chan Lee
Issue Date
2012
Publisher
경희대학교(국제캠퍼스) 비교문화연구소
Keywords
Suk-je Sung; problematic individual; active nihilism; power; passion
Citation
비교문화연구, v.28, pp.37 - 53
Indexed
KCI
Journal Title
비교문화연구
Volume
28
Start Page
37
End Page
53
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/110003
DOI
10.21049/ccs.2012.28..37
ISSN
1598-0685
Abstract
This paper examines 'an active nihilism' in Suk-je Sung's novels in detail. The focus of this study is formed from the critical mind in a critical perspective that in Korean novels before and after 2000s, characters who embody 'problematic individuals' of Lukács have disappeared and those close to 'active nihilists' has become the mainstream. The most representative example of this phenomenon is Suk-je Sung's novels. 'Active nihilists' in his novels are described as 'ascetics' who mastered various spheres such as 'billiard', 'baduk gambling', 'alcohol', 'dance', and 'book collecting', and so on. In the sense that they reject the transcendental conditions of the modern world and live in the space and time of play in which they can display their passion and potentiality to the maximum, they beings jumping over the 'reality principle'. Also, what they want to repeat is not the endless exchange of labor and capital according to the capitalist system of exchange but rather the repeated existence of their power and passion. This 'anthropology of power and passion' is 'active nihilism' which could be expressed as the 'subject of creating new value' and 'Dionysian affirmation' by Nietzsche. Suk-je Sung's novels sharply prove the stylistic essence of 'a novel' which has to create its own form every time, constantly renewing the narrative style of the past ideal model. In this respect, they are very problematic and his innovation of a form draws the attention. Further, this will certainly be the important object of research in the diachronic dimension of contemporary Korean novel.
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Lee, Chan
문화스포츠대학 (문화창의학부)
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