A Representative of Cold War Fiction? Cover Image

Typický studenoválečný román?
A Representative of Cold War Fiction?

Roman Kim’s The Notebook Found in Sunch’on

Author(s): Miriam Löwensteinová, Matěj Valošek, Sunbee Yu
Subject(s): Language and Literature Studies, Studies of Literature
Published by: Univerzita Karlova v Praze - Filozofická fakulta, Vydavatelství
Keywords: Cold War Fiction; Roman Kim; The Notebook Found in Sun’chon

Summary/Abstract: Roman Kim (1899–1967) was a Soviet Korean writer, Orientalist and counterintelligence officer, well- -known in the 1950s and 1960s Eastern Europe as the author of political and spy novels such as The Girl from Hiroshima (1954), The Cobra under the Pillow (1962), The School of Phantoms (1965). This paper analyzes his famous novel The Notebook Found in Sunch’on (1951), its authenticity and message, not from the point of view of its literariness, but in the context of the 1950s. In this book Roman Kim openly accused Americans and Japanese that by the Korean conflict they tried to realize the “first of their ABC plan” leading eventually to World War III.

  • Issue Year: XXXIII/2023
  • Issue No: 67
  • Page Range: 121-134
  • Page Count: 14
  • Language: Czech
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