- Korean poetry
Korean poetry is poetry performed or written in the
Korean language or byKorean people . Traditional Korean poetry is often sung in performance. Until the 20th century, much of Korean poetry was written inHanja in classical Chinese.Origins
Korean teachers were writing poetry in the classical Chinese style as early as the 14th century, with roots in Chinese
quatrain s. A famous surviving example dates to 17 BC, King Yuri's "Song of Yellow Birds". Most Korean poetry followed the style ofT'ang lyric poetry such as the shi poetry form.Notable Korean poetry began to flourish under Confucian scholarship in the
Goryeo period (starting in 935). Collections were rarely printed.Sijo , Korea's favorite poetic genre, is often traced toConfucian monks of the 11th century, but its roots, too, are in those earlier forms. The earliest surviving poem of the sijo genre is from the 4th century. Its greatest flowering occurred in the 16th and 17th centuries under theJoseon Dynasty .Hyangga
Hyangga poetry was written in Chinese using Korean characters (usually in the
idu system) and is characteristic of the literature ofUnified Silla . It is one of the first uniquely Korean forms of poetry. The "Samguk Yusa " contains 14 poems that have been preserved to the present day. Eleven poems from the laterGoryeo Dynasty "gyeonyeonjin", characterized by the same style, have also been preserved.Hyangga are characterized by a number of formal rules. The poems may consist of four, eight or ten lines. The ten-line poems are the most developed, structured into ten sections with four, four, and two lines respectively. Many of the five-line poems were written by
Buddhist monk s.Goryeo songs
The
Goryeo period was marked by a growing use of Chinese characters. Hyangga largely disappeared as a form of Korean literature, and "Goryeo songs" ("Goryeo gayo") became more popular. Most of the Goryeo songs were transmitted orally and many survived into theJoseon period, when some of them were written down usinghangul .The poetic form of the Goryeo songs is known as "byeolgok". There are two distinct forms: "dallyeonche" (단련체) and "yeonjanche" (연잔체). The former is a short form, whereas the latter is a more extended form. The Goryeo songs are characterized by their lack of clear form, and by their increased length. Most are direct in their nature, and cover aspects of common life.
Sijo
With the rise of
Joseon nationalism (starting in 1392), three-line poetry, calledsijo , became more popular and reached its apex in the late 18th century. Sijo is a modern term for what was then called "dan-ga" (literally, "short song").The sijo having a strong foundation in nature in a short profound structure.
Bucolic , metaphysical andastronomical themes are often explored. The lines average 14-16 syllables, for a total of 44-46. There is a pause in the middle of each line, so in English they are sometimes printed in six lines instead of three. Most poets follow these guidelines very closely although there are longer examples. The most famous example is possibly this piece byYun Seondo ::You ask how many friends I have? Water and stone, bamboo and pine.:The moon rising over the eastern hill is a joyful comrade.:Besides these five companions, what other pleasure should I ask?
Yun Seondo (1587-1671) also wrote a famous collection of forty sijo of the changing
seasons through the eyes of a fisherman.Either narrative or thematic, this lyric verse introduces a situation or problem in line 1, development (called a turn) in line 2, and a strong conclusion beginning with a surprise (a twist) in line 3, which resolves tensions or questions raised by the other lines and provides a memorable ending.
Sijo is, first and foremost, a
song . This lyric pattern gained popularity in royal courts amongst the "yangban" as a vehicle forreligious orphilosophical expression, but a parallel tradition arose among the commoners. Sijo were sung or chanted with musical accompaniment, and this tradition survives. The word originally referred only to the music, but it has come to be identified with the lyrics.Gasa
Gasa is a form of verse, although its content can include more than the expression of individual sentiment, such as moral admonitions. Gasa is a simple form of verse, with twinned feet of three or four syllables each. Some regard gasa a form of
essay . Common themes in gasa were nature, the virtues of gentlemen, or love between man and woman.The form had first emerged during the
Goryeo period., and was popular during theJoseon Dynasty . They were commonly sung, and were popular amongyangban women.Jeong Cheol , a poet of the 16th century, is regarded as having perfected the form, which consisted of parallel lines, each broken into two four-syllable units.Modern poetry
There were attempts at introducing
imagist and modern poetry methods particularly in translations of early American moderns such asEzra Pound andT. S. Eliot in the early 20th century. In the early Republic period (starting in 1953 after theKorean War ), patriotic works were very successful.Lyrical poetry dominated from the 1970s onwards. Poetry is quite popular in twenty-first century Korea, both in terms of number of works published and lay writing.
A corpus of modern Korean poetry is being compiled. The work provides linguistic information on 10,300 original Korean poems [ Kim Byong-sun, 2002, "The Present Conditions and Tasks in Constructing the Databaseof Korean Literary Materials Centering on the Korean Poetry Corpus," "The Review of Korean Studies" 8 (4):105-140. http://review.aks.ac.kr/AttachedFiles/02기획논문_4김병선.pdf ] .
See also
*
List of Korea-related topics
*Korean culture
*Korean literature
*List of Korean language poets References
External links
* [http://www.sogang.ac.kr/~anthony/Outline.htm An outline history of Korean poetry]
* [http://hompi.sogang.ac.kr/anthony/KoreanPoems.htm Korean poems in English translations]
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