Choi Inho | |
---|---|
Born | October 17, 1945 |
Died | (aged 68) |
Language | Korean |
Nationality | South Korean |
Ethnicity | Korean |
Citizenship | South Korean |
Education | post-secondary |
Alma mater | Yonsei University |
Korean name | |
Hangul | 최인호 |
---|---|
Hanja | 崔仁浩 |
Revised Romanization | Choe In Ho |
McCune–Reischauer | Ch'oe In Ho |
Choi In-ho (17 October 1945 – 25 September 2013) was a South Korean writer.
Born in Seoul, Choi In-ho graduated from the Department of English Literature at Yonsei University and debuted as a writer in 1967 with “Patient Apprentice” (Gyeonseup Hwanja, 견습환자) which was selected as one of the winners of the New Spring Literary Contest sponsored by The Chosun Ilbo.
In his youth, Choi was known as a prodigious drinker ("guzzler"), and in 2014 his hand-prints were memorialized on the sidewalk of Yonsei-ro, where he frequently drank.
In 1987, when he was 43 years old, Choi converted to Catholicism, but nonetheless managed to extend his narrative range to include Buddhism in Road Without Road. Choi has also taught at Yonsei University and Catholic University of Korea.
He died September 25, 2013, at age 68 (Korean age) from salivary gland cancer.
Choi In-ho began writing in 1963 at age 17 and took to it naturally. This is clear in his own account of writing two stories, “The Boozer”(술꾼) (1970) and “A Stranger’s Room”(타인의 방) (1971), which earned him a reputation as one of the most controversial novelists of the 1970s. According to Choi, “The Boozer” was completed in only two hours, while “A Stranger’s Room” was written overnight for the first issue of Literature and Intelligence.
A handful of his early stories gained notice when they won competitions sponsored by local papers (The Hanguk ilbo in 1963, the Chosun ilbo in 1966) and the Sasanggye Magazine (1968). His early stories (Including "The Boozer," widely anthologized in English, which created general awareness of his career in 1970, though written earlier) depicted harsh and satirical landscapes of the results of consumerism. Choi focused on the people caught in the middle of a rapidly industrializing Korea, presenting a satirical picture of burgeoning consumerism and the resultant dehumanization.
In the mid-1970s, Ch'oe generalized his focus to that of alienation and wrote "Deep Blue Night," which told of the harsh and alienated "road trip" of two Koreans in California. It won the prestigious Yi Sang award in Korea in 1982. It was translated into English by Bruce Fulton and his wife Ju-Chan Fulton for the Literature Translation Institute of Korea and Jimoondang Publishing.