The Meaning of the Title
- Bookishkrish24
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Re: The Meaning of the Title
- RachelEmmanuel
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But Christ has indeed been raised from the dead...The last enemy to be destroyed is death.
- Swirliegirlie
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I think she was aware of what marriage for her would look like. What she didn't perceive, though, was having a husband like Kim Byung Hob—whoring around, getting drunk all day, and losing so much money on gambling. Embon, on the other hand, made himself clear that he didn't want to get married yet... but his mom forced him anyway.cd20 wrote: ↑07 Jan 2021, 15:14 I agree it could be all three. I also think it could be that the idea of what they thought their lives would look like also vanished. I am sure Lady S could have never imagined herself trapped in a loveless marriage, only to see her son turn out the same. I am sure Embon never imagined his life would be the way it was.
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- lavkathleen
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I bet not everything got written, though. Some of them might have gotten destroyed, too. And then there's also the historians who spread false information. And the fact that a lot of our history are not taught properly in school and public.
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- lavkathleen
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It's not just the upper class, though, but the Korean culture as a whole. Whether a person is from the upper or lower class, they each had a reason to leave their traditions behind. I believe it's not only the yangbans who made a sacrifice, although the story focuses on them.Book Lover Jack wrote: ↑10 Jan 2021, 16:02 I believe the author wrote the book to remind us of the forgotten Korean Upper class (yangban). In this book's case, the elite young men in society that died for their country. Generally, however, I believe its the forgotten Korean upper class whose story has vanished from history along with its heroes
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- lavkathleen
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I never thought of that. Giving women that small slice of justice. It's poetic. I was wondering why the author only gave the first-person perspective to Lady Sougyon—I now have another answer for it.Fazzier wrote: ↑14 Jan 2021, 10:18 Your second point aptly captures what the title of the book meant to me. I took it to mean the silencing of the voice of the marginalized (especially women). I found it outstanding the only person the author gave the privilege to narrate the story from their perspective was a woman, hence giving her a voice.
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- lavkathleen
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Perhaps. Someone said that it was probably about the vanishing of the story of the yangbans—and I disagreed with it. Exactly because of this. I think other than the rich life of the aristrocats, the stories of the silent rebels and independence activists are lost somewhere, too.
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1) the gradual disappearance of the traditional Korean way of life under Japanese occupation and dominance;