Vegetarijanka

Knyga kietais viršeliais, 188 psl.

slovenščina kalba

Publikuota 2021

ISBN:
978-961-01-5814-1
ISBN kodas nukopijuotas!

Ko Yeong-hye nekega dne iz hladilnika vrže stran vse meso in oznani, da je od zdaj naprej vegetarijanka, se običajnost zakona med njo in njenim možem začne krhati. Stvari eskalirajo ob družinskem kosilu, ko ji oče nasilno v usta potisne kos mesa. Yeong-hye zagrabi nož in si prereže zapestje in konča v bolnišnici. Od tega dogodka naprej lahko opazujemo postopen razpad njene širše družine in neučinkovitost institucij, ki jim je Yeong-hye podvržena.

5 leidimai

apžvelgė autoriaus Kang Han knygą The Vegetarian

A tough novel about social norms

4 žvaigždutės

With The Vegetarian I have now read four of Han Kang's five novels that have been translated into English. I adore her prose and artistic storytelling. This is her most famous novel, a story of Yeong-hye, a woman who becomes vegetarian and then makes a series of choices that give her other forms of agency, as the people around her become more and more aghast at these simple acts of refusal. Pointedly, the protagonist never gets to tell her side of the story. Her actions are told through three observers: her pathetic, patriarchal husband, her sister's artist husband, and her caring and diligent sister. Each observes her changing over time.

The first story is very difficult – her husband is an atrocious, weak and pathetic character who only married so he could dominate another human, and he is revolted by her small acts of refusal. The second is more …

I Liked the Final Story Far More

3 žvaigždutės

Įspėjimas dėl turinio Could have spoilers for the final story.

apžvelgė autoriaus Kang Han knygą The Vegetarian

Culturally translatable ascetism

5 žvaigždutės

This was a difficult book to finish. I wanted to finish it, for about a week, but the last 50 or so pages are emotionally harrowing. Hard work.

Stylistically beautiful. Terse and without any extraneous detail, it reads a bit like a ascetic philosophical exploration of decisions in society.

A lot of other reviews (and the blurb above) focus on the book's setting in Korea -- traditionally meat-heavy diet, traditionally rigid patriachal family structure etc. I didn't find this -- apart from the names of people (which are few) and the descriptions of food, there is very little to locate this book in space or time beyond being somewhat modern.