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A Voice From the Earth


Article # : 19960 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 8 / 1992  2,312 Words
Author : J. Martin Holman
J Martin Holman is a professor in East Asian studies at Vanderbilt University. He is the editor and translator of Shadows of a Sound and The Book of Masks, collections of Hwang Sun Won's later stories by Korean author Yun Heung Gil. His other translations include The Old Capital and Palm-of- the-Hand Stories by Japanese Nobel laureate Yasunari Kawabata. He taught Japanese and Korean literature at Wakayama University near Osaka, Japan.

       In writing I Am the Clay, Chaim Potok has given voice in English to a story that is unfamiliar to American ears. For many Americans, the Korean conflict is a war that took place in sort of netherworld that hovered somewhere between Japan and a television lot in Hollywood. Most know little of the political forces that spawned the war, the geography of the country, or the culture and history of its people.
       
        I Am the Clay leaves aside questions of political ideology and brilliant or obtuse military strategy, focusing instead on the struggles of an old Korean couple to survive an upheaval so vast that it can scarcely be comprehended. Already having been short-changed by fate--aging and childless in a culture obsessed with the production of male heirs--the two old people suffer the dislocation of war and wrestle with the specter of the fruitless past as they ponder their precarious future, should they continue to nurse and carry a wounded boy they have found as they flee with other refugees.
       
        The old couple are farmers, as were most Koreans of the time. As the title of the novel implies, the soil of their native land plays a vital role in the story. The earth gives the old man and woman their livelihood. Their lives have been lived in partnership with the soil. The land was their ancestral land. The encroaching war, however, drives the childless couple from their village, and they are forced to scrounge and scavenge for food in a desolate, unpredictable world very different from the one they have known.
       
        In traditional Korean thought, geomancy--the study of the supernatural forces that permeate the land, their divination and proper consideration ... (2000 of 12939 Characters)
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