|    Login    |    Register

Red Rain on a Spring Mountain: Poems of Ho Nansorhon

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Red Rain on a Spring Mountain: Poems of Ho Nansorhon

Contributors:

By (Author) Nansorhon Ho
Translated by Ian Haight
Translated by Tae-young Ho

ISBN:

9781945680809

Publisher:

White Pine Press

Imprint:

White Pine Press

Publication Date:

10th September 2025

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Main Subject:
Other Subjects:

Classic and pre-20th century poetry

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

140

Dimensions:

Width 152mm, Height 228mm

Description

The complete collection of poems by Nansrhn, a 16th century sequestered noblewoman and one of Korea's first feminists in literature, considered by many Korean scholars to be Korea's greatest poet.

Nansrhn's writes frequently in the Korean han style of "deep sighs," a thematically-styled poetry reminiscent of the Chinese "women poets of anguish," practiced by writers such as Li, Ch'ing-chao (1084-1151). In this style, hardships that cannot be overcome but only endured are named and lamented: the death of children, abandonment by husbands, and destruction of households from war are a few examples. She did not lose the means to express her feelings, however, and her poetry remains as testament to the process of her responses to her life.

The feminism of Nansrhn begins with her education and the act of writing poetry. If a Korean noblewoman of this period wrote about progressive themes that challenged social norms, she had to express the ideas by using personas and troping traditional formal structures. Poetry written in this manner could then be defended by the noblewoman as simply practicing variations on poetic tradition, despite the subtextual commentary on abandonment, experiences or opinions on sequestering, larger questions about socialized gender roles and identity, or what it means to be an artist.

Author Bio

Nansrhn (1563-1589, penname "White Orchid") was a sequestered noblewoman who lived during the sixteenth century in Korea. Considered by many Korean scholars to be Korea's greatest female poet, she died at the age of twenty-seven.

See all

Other titles from White Pine Press