※ 저자 수상정보
Lee Si-young, a poet of delicate sensibilities, began his literary career depicting the gloomy everyday life under the military dictatorship in the 1970s and 1980s from the perspective of ordinary people. Lee aims to transform his art into a song for the suffering masses. His early poems are long and even prose-like, expressing his compassion towards the poor and the weak, and at the same time, embodying his fierce determination to preserve his humanity even amidst hardships. In the 1990s, Lee’s poems became drastically shorter in length. Composed of no more than two or three lines, they came to resemble Zen Buddhist poems in their use of minimal language and compacted form to encapsulate profound meaning and symbolic resonance. Most recently, notable is the change from short poems to prose poems with a rich texture of life. The critic Choi Won-sik acclaimed Lee’s recent poems as prose poems that use pure language to revitalize the precious memories embedded in the painful history of Korea. Lee is the recipient of 1994 Sorabol Literature Prize, 1996 Jeong Ji-yong Literature Award and 2004 Paik Suk Literature Award.