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Poet Kim Soo-young stands in absolute freedom, absolute love, and absolute nature. He tells nature to listen with his ears on. He says he will do what nature tells him to do. In this article, we saw three things. First, Ecological Imagination comes from the beginning in Kim Soo-young's poetry. In particular, flowers appear as symbols to overcome sadness in Gurahjunghwa(「구라중화」). Second, Kim Soo-young reproduces the subject of the revolution called multiple as a vegetable image. It describes the revolution as the power of creation that nature has, such as grass, droplets, or vegetable gardens. There is no memo that Kim Soo-young read Spinoza's Political Theory. Third, Kim Soo-young himself recommended to read the Books written by Ham Seok-heon, and We can compare with the meaning of Kim Soo-young's revolutionary theory and Ham Seok-heon's "Cial(씨ᄋᆞᆯ)". Kim Soo-young embodied Spinoza's saying, "To preserve each person's natural rights as much as possible," as grass, flowers, and snow. It is difficult to limit Kim Soo-young to a modernist by reading his poems that reproduced his rural life realistically. Looking at Kim Soo-young's poems written while living in rural areas, it is difficult to define him simply as a modernist. The vitality of "By the Green Onion," which is often contained in textbooks, is based on the vitality he aims for. The snow, droplets, green onions, and grass he uses to talk about the revolution all symbolize nature.
키워드
- 제목
- 김수영의 생태적 상상력, 스피노자와 함석헌
- 제목 (타언어)
- Poet Kim Sooyoung's Ecological Imagination, Spinoza and Ham Seokheon.
- 저자
- 김응교
- 발행일
- 2022-02
- 저널명
- 한국시학연구
- 호
- 69
- 페이지
- 9 ~ 38