South Korean writer
verifiedCite
While every effort has been made to follow citation style rules, there may be some discrepancies.Please refer to the appropriate style manual or other sources if you have any questions.
Select Citation Style
Feedback
Thank you for your feedback
Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.
printPrint
Please select which sections you would like to print:
verifiedCite
While every effort has been made to follow citation style rules, there may be some discrepancies.Please refer to the appropriate style manual or other sources if you have any questions.
Select Citation Style
Written by
René Ostberg
Fact-checked by
The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Last Updated: •Article History
Quick Facts
- Awards And Honors:
- Nobel Prize (2024)
- Booker Prize (2016)
See all related content →
News •
South Koreans are joyful after Han Kang wins Nobel Prize for literature• Oct. 11, 2024, 4:37 AM ET (AP)
Han Kang is a South Korean writer who is known for her experimental fiction and her works that address humanity’s capacity for violence. In 2024 she became the first South Korean author to win the Nobel Prize for Literature, cited by the Nobel committee “for her intense poetic prose that confronts historical traumas and exposes the fragility of human life.”
Han Kang at a Glance
Name: Han Kang
Born: November 27, 1970, Gwangju, South Korea
Awards: Nobel Prize for Literature (2024), International Booker Prize (2016)
Notable Books: The Vegetarian (2007), Greek Lessons (2011), The White Book (2016)
Childhood and influences
Han and her family moved to Seoul when she was nine years old, leaving Gwangju, South Korea, just four months before the Gwangju Uprising, a mass protest against theSouth Koreanmilitary governmentthat took placein May 1980. The government’s brutal response has frequently haunted Han’s writing, and she has said that her family’s incidental move before the uprising has left her with a sense of “survivor’s guilt.” Her father was a teacher and, later, a novelist, although not a financially successful one, and she grew up in a home filled with books. In 2023 she told The Guardian, “To me, books were half-living beings that constantly multiplied and expanded their boundaries. Despite [our] frequent moves, I could feel at ease thanks to all those books protecting me. Before I made friends in a strange neighborhood, I had my books with me every afternoon.”
Han’s favorite authors as a child included the Korean writers Kang So-cheon and Ma Hae-song. She also enjoyed The Brothers Lionheart (1973) bySwedish children’s author Astrid Lindgren. By her teens, she was hooked on Russian authors such as Fyodor Dostoyevsky and Boris Pasternak and became “enthralled” with Lim Chul-woo’s short story “Sapyong Station” (2002).
Education
She studied Korean language and literature at Yonsei University in Seoul, graduating in 1993. That same year she published her first poems in a Korean literary magazine and won a prize the following year in the newspaper Seoul Shinmun’s annual literary contest. In 1995 she published Yeosu,a book of short stories. She participated in the International Writing Program at the University of Iowa in 1998. Her first novel, the mystery Black Deer,was published later that year.
Novels
The political events in Gwangju during Han’s childhood and her beginnings as a poet inform her fiction writing. Her prose is often described as experimental and imbued with metaphors, and her work addresses such themes as violence, grief, and patriarchy. In an interview with The White Review in 2016 she explained, “The broad spectrum of humanity, which runs from the sublime to the brutal, has for me been like a difficult homework problem ever since I was a child. You could say that my books are variations on this theme of human violence.”
The Vegetarian (2007; translated into English in 2015) was the first of her novels to be translated into English, and it won the International Booker Prize in 2016. It originated in 1997 as the short story “The Fruit of My Woman.” Examining issues such as body horror, mental illness, consent, and misogyny, the novel tells the story of a young woman who stops eating meat, which has disturbing consequences. After her family attempts to force-feed her, she stops eating altogether. Some critics interpreted the protagonist’s rebellion and her family’s response as a metaphor for colonial rebellion and the violence of imperialism.
In 2011 she published Greek Lessons (translated into English in 2023), an exploration of grief and its impact on language. The novel features two unnamed narrators, a man who is losing his ability to see and a woman who is losing her ability to speak. In a review published in The New York Times, Idra Novey noted its “occasional excesses” of repetition in the prose but added, “This novel achieves the distinctive sharpness of observation and persuasive narrative power that brought such recognition to [Han’s] more assured, fully realized books.”
Are you a student?
Get a special academic rate on Britannica Premium.
Subscribe
In The White Book (2016), Han uses a fragmented first-person narrative to eulogize an unnamed woman’s sister who died less than two hours after being born. Praised for its haunting power, the novel was a finalist for the 2018 International Booker Prize.
Han’s other novels include Human Acts (2014; translated into English in 2016), in which she calls upon her memories of the Gwangju Uprising. The book won the Manhae Prize for Literature. We Do Not Part (2021; to be published in English in 2025) is a work of historical fiction that centers on the impact of a massacre committed by the South Korean government during a rebellion on Jeju Island in the 1940s.
Other projects
In 2018 Han was selected to contribute toFuture Library, aproject that began in 2014 and invites one author each year to produce a manuscript to be stored until 2114, when all the manuscripts will be published as an anthology printed onpapergrown fromtreesplanted in 2014.
René Ostberg