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A collection of 155 exceptionally rare, early twentieth-century traditional
style Korean popular novels is housed in the C. V. Starr East Asian Library.
These novels are deemed unique and no other copies are known to exist, as they
were in all likelihood lost or destroyed during the Japanese occupation and the
subsequent Korean war. The novels were printed in Korean script at a time when
this was discouraged by the Japanese occupation government. Since the Korean
language has changed considerably in the course of the twentieth century, and
most published material before the twentieth century was typically written in
formal language and Chinese script, the novels also provide a unique record of
the colloquial language of the time. As these novels were not produced through
the major publishing houses, most are physically sub-standard products, printed
on cheap paper with primitive printing methods. Most volumes have gaudily
colored covers and are no more than thin booklets, most of them with well under
a hundred pages. The three volumes here on display are a traditional style
popular novel (kodae sosŏl) chronicling the life of the Chinese emperor
Tang Taizong (626-649), a tragic novel (pigŭk sosŏl) about a life full of
hardship, and the story of a mythical creature(Pulgasari) during the
last years of Songdo (modern Kaesŏng), the old capital of Chosŏn (1392-1910),
said to eat metal, to expel nightmares, and to purge noxious vapors.
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