South Korean writer Han Kang has just won the Nobel Prize for Literature. The judges praised her “intense poetic prose that confronts historical traumas and exposes the fragility of human life.” With eight novels under her belt, plus three short story collections and a poetry portfolio, Han Kang is now the 18th woman—and the first Asian woman—to receive literature’s highest accolade.
Writer Anna Karin Palm, a member of the Swedish Academy that awards the prizes, praised Han Kang’s body of work as “a very rich and complex oeuvre that spans many genres”. She highlighted Han’s prose as “both tender and brutal, and at times slightly surreal,” emphasising that while her themes are consistent, the remarkable stylistic diversity of her writing makes each of her books a new revelation, offering fresh expressions of her core ideas.
Initial publications
Born on 27 November 1970 in Gwangju, South Korea’s sixth-largest city, she studied Korean literature at Yonsei University in Seoul and published five poems in the 1993 issue of the journal Literature and Society. In 1994, she gained recognition by winning the Spring Literary Competition for Young Writers for her short story The Red Anchor. This is a significant milestone for emerging authors in Korea, judged by the country’s leading newspapers.
Following this achievement, she released her first collection of short stories, titled Love. Her subsequent collection, Love in Yeosu, was published in 1995. This saw her revisiting her youth, evoking the enchanting coastal town of Yeosu through reflections on love, melancholy, the inherent sadness of life, and a tragic vision of the world. A South Korean literary critic called her “the youngest classic writer of our era”.
In a 2020 interview with the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Han Kang described the presence of books in her childhood, saying: “Books were like a creature that expanded around me day after day, week after week, month after month.” Her early years were defined by simplicity—her father was a struggling novelist, and the family had few possessions. Frequently moving house and school, books became her constant and her refuge.
Black Deer (1998)
Han Kang’s first full-length novel, Black Deer, published in both Korean and Chinese, is one of the most significant literary achievements of the 1990s. Set in the village of Yunichul, it draws upon the ancient Chinese myth of the mystical black deer who dwells deep underground, yearning to rise to the earth’s surface and feel the sun’s warmth, only to melt when touched by sunlight.
Critics hailed it for its seamless narrative structure and evocative symbolism, adding that it captured the essence of its era. Its precise details, unbroken narrative flow, powerful imagery and existential depth resonated with readers, too. One phrase that stood out is: “Life is a wound.”
Your Cold Hands (2002)
Han Kang then released her second novel, Your Cold Hands, a transformative work that she claimed: “changed my eyes and ears, changed the way I love, and quietly and silently led my soul to a pristine place I had never set foot in before”.
The novel tells the story of a sculptor obsessed with creating plaster casts of women’s bodies who writes about his fixation. In Han Kang’s hands, this becomes a profound exploration of life’s hardships, examining pain, obsession, and the complexities of the human soul.
The Vegetarian (2007)
Winner of the 2016 Man Booker Prize, Han Kang’s The Vegetarian was her first to be translated into English. It begins with a husband saying: “Before my wife became a vegetarian, she was a completely normal person in every way.”
The protagonist, Yeong-hye, initially a dutiful and compliant wife, is tormented by recurring nightmares that lead her to renounce meat entirely. This seems irrational to those around her and stuns her husband, who responds with cruel attempts to coerce her back. Her authoritarian father also intervenes, trying to force her to abandon her newfound resolve. Pressure mounts, and her resistance culminates in a desperate act of defiance: attempted suicide. She is eventually hospitalised.