In Korean post-modern novels after Korean war, ‘cynicism’ has meant primarily to sneer at aberrant characters set in fiction. However, it is the ‘cynicism’ in Korean post-war new generation novels that accepts any negative reality from which o...
http://chineseinput.net/에서 pinyin(병음)방식으로 중국어를 변환할 수 있습니다.
변환된 중국어를 복사하여 사용하시면 됩니다.
https://www.riss.kr/link?id=T11971924
대구 : 경북대학교 대학원, 2010
학위논문 (석사) -- 경북대학교 대학원 , 국어국문학과 현대문학전공 , 2010. 2
2010
한국어
895.7 판사항(22)
대구
119 p. ; 26 cm
참고문헌: p. 111-116
0
상세조회0
다운로드다국어 초록 (Multilingual Abstract)
In Korean post-modern novels after Korean war, ‘cynicism’ has meant primarily to sneer at aberrant characters set in fiction. However, it is the ‘cynicism’ in Korean post-war new generation novels that accepts any negative reality from which o...
In Korean post-modern novels after Korean war, ‘cynicism’ has meant primarily to sneer at aberrant characters set in fiction. However, it is the ‘cynicism’ in Korean post-war new generation novels that accepts any negative reality from which one cannot avoid for himself, but works as a part of strategy to set up against such reality.
It is found that Korean new generation novelists depicted post-war reality of Korean society in negative settings, and they took a plot strategy similar to kynicism's overturn (turning upside down). Their cynicism has two different meanings broadly depending on whether they reveal any ideological and conscious intention or empirical and behavioral intention: The former means passive cynicism, whereas the latter means active cynicism.
Summing up, it is concluded that the above novelists discussed herein demonstrated the possibility of cynicism as a part of their strategic actions to get over negative post-war social reality beyond its simple implications, and thereby contributed to extending the viewpoints of Korean post-war new generation novelists into a little further sphere.
목차 (Table of Contents)