• Home
  • Blog
  • Please read the book Park Wan-suh, Who Ate Up All the Shinga? (New York: Columb

Please read the book Park Wan-suh, Who Ate Up All the Shinga? (New York: Columb

0 comments

GET A PROFESSIONAL PAPER DONE BY AN EXPERT

Please read the bookPark Wan-suh, Who Ate Up All the Shinga? (New York: Columbia University Press, 2009)Questions should be answered in the number format not essay. Best if you go straight to the point and with no fillers, please. each question is around 300 words. Plagiarism free. Thank you!!2. How does the narrator in WHO ATE UP ALL OF THE SHINGA? remember ‘nature”? What are some of the specific examples that impressed you while reading Park Wan-suh story?3. Born in 1930, Park, Wan-suh was 15 when Korea was liberated from Japan’s colonial rule. What would you say her memories of Japan is like? Are you surprised by the absence of Japan for the first 58 pages of her autobiography and the little treatment it receives even afterwards?4. In some strange (or actually creepy) sense, Park Wan-suh makes direct and indirect references to stories and poems by So Chong-ju, Yi Sang, Chong Chi-yong, Hyon Chin-gon that we have thus far read in class. Identify where they are and discuss how these references help define the difference between urban living and rural living.5. Though much of the story takes place in the 1930s and 1940s–long before all of us were born–for som odd reason, I can’t shake off the feeling that this story about a young child living in a distant city with only her mother just to go to better school is familiar to us as a recent “wild geese” phenomenon. https://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/08/world/asia/08geese.html?_r=1&th&emc=th&oref=slogin (Links to an external site.)Is this comparison fair or is it a complete over-reading? Be specific in your attempt to compare the transnational phenomenon of the so-called “wild geese” and Park’s study abroad experience.6. SHINGA is a woman’s literature–written from the perspective of a female author retaining the voice of a young girl as she recollects the memory of her childhood. If it’ was written by a man, for instance, the narrator’s brother, do you think the story would assume a completely different shape? How?

About the Author

Follow me


{"email":"Email address invalid","url":"Website address invalid","required":"Required field missing"}