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Yi Sang and more (이상 그 이상; 李箱 그 以上, 2013). <Yi Sang and more> is the eighth installment of the 70-minute MBC drama festival season 1, which aired on MBC from Nov. 28, 2013. The director is Choi Jung-kyu, actor Cho Seung-woo plays Yi Sang, and other actors such as Park Ha-sun, Jung Kyung-ho, and Han Sang-jin appear.
A Flower Tree (Korean: 꽃나무) is a poem written by the Korean author Yi Sang and published in the magazine <Catholic Youth (가톨닉靑年)> in July 1933. It is one of the representative works in surrealist and introspective literature from the 1930s. The poem explores themes of self-identity, the desire for self-fulfillment, and the ...
Yi Sang, a character based on both The Wings and its author, featured in the 2023 video game Limbus Company created by South Korean studio Project Moon. Fly, My Wings, a song by Mili that references the novel. The 1968 film The Wings of Yi Sang was directed by Choi In-hyeon. Shin Sung-il, who played the lead role, won the Grand Bell Award for ...
Pongbyŏlgi (Korean: 봉별기; RR: Bongbyeolgi), translated title A Record of Meeting and Parting, [1] is a short novel written by the Korean author Yi Sang in 1936 and published in the magazine Women (여성) in December 1936. It is one of Yi Sang's representative works, reflecting his transition from poetry to prose during that year.
Mirror (Korean: 거울) is a poem written by the Korean author Yi Sang.It was published in the October 1933 issue of Catholic Youth (가톨릭 청년, Volume 5).Other works by Yi Sang that also explore the theme of mirrors include Crow's Eye View, Poem No. 15 (오감도 시 제 15호) and Bright Mirror (명경).
The first track of avant-garde cellist Okkyung Lee's album Ghil (2013) is titled "The Crow Flew After Yi Sang", in reference to Yi's poem "Crow's Eye View". Limbus Company, a video game developed by Project Moon, contains a character named after Yi Sang, also utilizing a special move by the name "Crow's Eye View".
Yi Sang Literary Award This page was last edited on 10 August 2019, at 21:07 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 ...
Yi Sang-hwa, who sometimes published under the names Muryang, Sanghwa, and Baega, was born April 5, 1901, in Daegu, Joseon. He graduated from Jungdong High School in Seoul. He then went to Japan, where he studied French literature. In 1923, he returned to Korea and taught English and French in a Daegu high school. [2]