Tal-su Kim

Tal-su Kim
Native name 金達寿, 김달수
Born 1919
Died 1997
Pen name 金達寿, 大澤達雄, 金光淳, 朴永泰, 孫仁章, 金文洙, 白仁
Occupation Writer
Language Japanese, Korean
Citizenship Korean

Tal-su Kim (金達寿、キム・タルス/キムダルス、김달수, Kimu Darusu/Tarusu) was a Korea-born, Japan-raised writer. He is considered the "founding father" of Resident Korean literature. Although he spent most of his life in Japan, many of his literary works are set in Korea and explore the injustices of colonial rule and its painful aftermath.[1]

See also

References

  1. Scott, Christopher (June 2001). "Invisible Men: Resident Korean Writers in Postwar Japan, 1945-1972". Stanford Research Communication. Retrieved February 8, 2018.


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