Wegetarianka

Paperback, 168 pages

Polish language

Published by Kwiaty Orientu.

ISBN:
978-83-935271-4-4
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5 stars (6 reviews)

Translation of Ch'aesikchuŭija (Published 2007 by Ch'angbi)

12 editions

The Vegetarian

4 stars

One of my favorite short stories which I read in college was Melville's "Bartleby, the Scrivner." But Bartleby's got nothing on Yeong-hye. Her decision to become a vegetarian sends her family into a tailspin, as Han explores how an effort to renounce violence and reject the world's demands provokes a more and more violent reaction from those around her. Aspects of the story are absurd, but are told in a straight, just-the-facts-ma'am style that heightens the sense of how stark (yet simple) Yeong-hye's actions are. She determines, for her own reasons, to live as she wants, and the novel illustrates how challenging it is to take such a stance.

reviewed La Vegetariana by Han Kang

Tres relatos en un libro

5 stars

Posiblemente de los libros que más me gustaron últimamente. Su lectura engancha, aunque resulta en ocasiones bastante duro. Leyéndolo pensaba que, aparte de los relatos que cuenta en cada una de las partes, tiene mucho de filosófico; y me recordaba a los existencialistas. En el prólogo, que recomiendo no leer antes de leer la novela, comparan a su autora y premio Nobel de literatura de 2024, con Kafka. La primera parte nos habla de Yeong-hye, la vegetariana, a través de la mirada y el relato de su marido. El marido cuenta con toda naturalidad la opresión a la que está sometida su mujer a la que cosifica totalmente. Poco a poco vamos percibiendo esa cosificación y ese machismo que al final resulta insoportable. Al parecer, los críticos literarios coreanos, hombres de cierta edad y reconocimiento, hicieron durísimas críticas de la novela. Tal vez esta novela supuso para ellos un bofetón …

Culturally translatable ascetism

5 stars

This was a difficult book to finish. I wanted to finish it, for about a week, but the last 50 or so pages are emotionally harrowing. Hard work.

Stylistically beautiful. Terse and without any extraneous detail, it reads a bit like a ascetic philosophical exploration of decisions in society.

A lot of other reviews (and the blurb above) focus on the book's setting in Korea -- traditionally meat-heavy diet, traditionally rigid patriachal family structure etc. I didn't find this -- apart from the names of people (which are few) and the descriptions of food, there is very little to locate this book in space or time beyond being somewhat modern.