Kim Kirim (Korean: 김기림; Hanja: 金起林; May 11, 1908 – ?) was a Korean poet and literary critic who represented Korean modernist literature in the 1930s. Kim wrote monumental poems such as “The Weather Chart” (1936), “Wind Speed of the Sun” (1939), and “The Sea and the Butterfly” (1939) during the Japanese colonial period. In pursuing a new spirit of poetry, he criticized sentimental romanticism in the 1920s and the movement of the Korean Artists’ Proletarian Federation (KARF), which based its literary theory and practice on left-wing ideologies. Kim was one of the first intellectualists who introduced modernism to the Korean literary circle and emphasized rationality by means of the compressibility of poetry. Being active as a literary critic, he introduced great Korean writers such as Yi San
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| - Kim Kirim (en)
- 金起林 (ja)
- 김기림 (ko)
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| - 김기림(金起林, 1907년 4월 5일 ~ 1950년 6월 25일 납북)은 대한민국의 시인이자 문학 평론가이다. 본명은 김인손(金仁孫, 아명(兒名)은 金寅孫)이며, 편석촌(片石村)이라는 아호를 사용하였다. (ko)
- Kim Kirim (Korean: 김기림; Hanja: 金起林; May 11, 1908 – ?) was a Korean poet and literary critic who represented Korean modernist literature in the 1930s. Kim wrote monumental poems such as “The Weather Chart” (1936), “Wind Speed of the Sun” (1939), and “The Sea and the Butterfly” (1939) during the Japanese colonial period. In pursuing a new spirit of poetry, he criticized sentimental romanticism in the 1920s and the movement of the Korean Artists’ Proletarian Federation (KARF), which based its literary theory and practice on left-wing ideologies. Kim was one of the first intellectualists who introduced modernism to the Korean literary circle and emphasized rationality by means of the compressibility of poetry. Being active as a literary critic, he introduced great Korean writers such as Yi San (en)
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| - Haksung, Hamgyeongbuk-do, Korean Empire (en)
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| - Bachelor of English Literature (en)
- Tohoku Imperial University, Japan (en)
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| - Poetry, Literary criticism (en)
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| - "The Weather Chart" , "Wind Speed of the Sun" , "The Sea and the Butterfly" (en)
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| - Writer (en)
- Poet and literary critic (en)
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| - Kim Kirim (Korean: 김기림; Hanja: 金起林; May 11, 1908 – ?) was a Korean poet and literary critic who represented Korean modernist literature in the 1930s. Kim wrote monumental poems such as “The Weather Chart” (1936), “Wind Speed of the Sun” (1939), and “The Sea and the Butterfly” (1939) during the Japanese colonial period. In pursuing a new spirit of poetry, he criticized sentimental romanticism in the 1920s and the movement of the Korean Artists’ Proletarian Federation (KARF), which based its literary theory and practice on left-wing ideologies. Kim was one of the first intellectualists who introduced modernism to the Korean literary circle and emphasized rationality by means of the compressibility of poetry. Being active as a literary critic, he introduced great Korean writers such as Yi Sang, Baek Seok, and Jeong Ji-yong to the literary world through his critique and papers. After Korea’s liberation from Japanese colonial rule, Kim took part in the progressive Chosun Writer’s Union along with the writers Jeong Ji-yong and Lee Tae-jun and called for the role of literature in building a new nation by its active engagement in reality. (en)
- 김기림(金起林, 1907년 4월 5일 ~ 1950년 6월 25일 납북)은 대한민국의 시인이자 문학 평론가이다. 본명은 김인손(金仁孫, 아명(兒名)은 金寅孫)이며, 편석촌(片石村)이라는 아호를 사용하였다. (ko)
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| - Kim In-son (김인손, 金仁孫) (en)
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