KimJi Young, Born 1982 - Sinh NÄm 1982 Sinh NÄm 1982 lĂ cuá»n sĂĄch ká» vá» cuá»c Äá»i cá»§a má»t ngưá»i phỄ nữ bá» chứng rá»i loáșĄn tĂąm lĂ sau sinh, tĂȘn lĂ Kim Ji Young. CĂąu chuyá»n má» Äáș§u báș±ng những dĂČng giá»i thiá»u vá» cĂŽ - á» thá»i Äiá»m hiá»n táșĄi.
WhenI sat down to watch Kim Ji-young, Born 1982 in a Hong Kong cinema, I knew it would be a meaningful movie, presenting valuable social insight. The Korean drama has been sparking headlines for
Acase history of a South Korean Everywoman driven to the brink by misogyny. Cho Nam-joo's feminist debut novel, Kim Jiyoung, Born 1982, strikes a deep chord with me, and not only because I'm female. Every woman who reads this strange, extraordinary, and infuriating document (and every woman should read it) will find glimpses of her own life.
Vay Tiá»n Nhanh. Kim Ji-young, Born 1982 is a film about a woman in her 30s named Ji-young Jung Yu-mi who has recently given birth to her first child and acts as a stay-at-home mother while her husband Jung Dae-hyun Gong Yoo continues working. Since the birth of their child, Ji-young has started acting strangely. From time to time, she will be seemingly taken over by another personâs spirit, such as her mother, or deceased grandmother, and speak as if she is that person rather than Ji-young, referring to herself in the third person and taking on personality quirks of whoever is âpossessingâ her at that time, like wanting to drink beer. Afterwards, Ji-young has no memory of it, and puts the lost time down to simply being tired following childbirth. Dae-hyun naturally is worried, thinking she may be experiencing postpartum depression, and asks her to visit a psychiatrist, although he doesnât tell her she has been acting âpossessedâ from time to time. From here, the film jumps between important events of Ji-youngâs past and the unfolding story of the present to flesh out Ji-youngâs character, her influences, and how she came to be the woman she is today. Societal and Individual Misogyny For me, there were basically two main ingredients to the film the dynamics of the family both Ji-young and Dae-hyunâs parents and siblings, and how difficult it is for an ordinary woman just to exist in such a male-dominated society. Both of these aspects worked very well, for me. The performances of all the characters are excellent, especially Ji-young and Dae-hyun, you can really feel the warmth, the worry, the love and the pressure of it all. Ji-young prepares dinner at Dae-hyunâs parents house, her mother-in-law supervises and the men relax in the living room The focus on how society is skewed towards men is handled very deftly as well. Itâs not exactly subtle, but neither is it a simple âMEN BADâ message. While some men do behave very poorly, itâs not always out of malice, but rather an insidious and instilled attitude baked into society. It can be as simple as an expectation of who will be cleaning or cooking dinner, or as serious as sexual harassment. For example, Ji-young feels pressured into being a staying at home mother and bearing the brunt of child-rearing simply because if Dae-hyun applied for paternity leave at work, it would become exponentially more difficult to be promoted after he returned. This, combined with womenâs earning power being less than menâs anyway, essentially traps Ji-young into the role of stay-at-home mother. Itâs not Dae-hyunâs fault that society is structured this way, but even so heâs not perfect either. Individually, a person may be caring and supportive, but itâs a good deal harder to free yourself from the constraints placed on you by society, and unlearn prejudices widely propagated and endlessly perpetuated by that society. Of course, the film is focused on South Korea, but this type of attitude and male-skewed society is prevalent the world over. Dae-hyun prepares to leave for work, Ji-young stays home with their child. The feeling I got watching this film wasnât that I was being chided for participating in society as it is, but rather the importance of opening your eyes to whatâs going on in the world. It doesnât explicitly tell you that you yourself need to change whether youâre a man who is profiting from how society is structured or youâre helping keep these kinds of attitudes alive, be you man or woman, but rather shines a light on the types of attitudes and practices that do need to change, on a societal level. It gives you an idea of the depth and breadth of issues women may face, simply for existing. Through this, hopefully you would come away from the film feeling outraged, or enlightened, or motivated to change things on your own. And hopeful that things can change. Maybe some combination of all of that. Iâll probably think about this film quite often, and I do hope I can help contribute to a fairer society, in whatever way I can. 8/10 Discover More Film Positivity!
Summary One of Koreaâs best-selling novels is a portrait of systemic discrimination that through its repeated ordinariness becomes something extraordinary. Originally released in its native South Korea in 2016, Cho Nam-Jooâs book shot to fame in South Korea when floor leader of the Justice Partyâs Roh Hoe-chan gifted the book to President Moon Jae-in. The book, which concerns a stay-at-home mother with depression, was inscribed with a message that read âPlease embrace Kim Ji-young Born â82.'â The film adaptation of KIM JI-YOUNG, BORN 1982 82ë
ì êčì§ì arrives in a timely fashion as the global MeToo movement shares similar true tales of everyday discrimination. Most descriptions will tell you that the titular Kim Ji-Young Jung Yu-Mi is an ordinary woman in her 30s who starts experiencing signs of being someone else. Of course, that spooky sounding plotline speaks more to the othernessâ she has been experiencing her whole life as a woman in Korea. This film signals the feature directorial debut of actor Kim Do-young, perhaps best known for roles in films like The Righteous Thief 2009. In translating the novel to the screen, she and co-writer Yoo Young-ah On Your Wedding Day have managed work Choâs vignettes into a single narrative while maintaining the cumulative impact of institutionalised sexism. From dealing with groping as a schoolgirl to familial and societal expectations of Ji-young as a mother, her wants and needs have consistently been secondary to those of her brother, husband, and father. Ostensibly about indoctrinated misogyny in South Korea, thereâs a universality to Ji-youngâs experience. Following the bookâs structure of a life as a case study, albeit without the bookends of a male doctor analysing her experience, Ji-youngâs life might be viewed by the men in her life extraordinary but the truth is that itâs the cumulative and systemic micro and letâs face it, macro aggressions that determine her fate. Early in the film, Ji-young overhears someone referring to her coffee break with child in tow as a âcomfortable life,â a viewpoint shared by many men in her circle. Her father gets easily outraged by any womanâs role that is not child-rearing, while Ji-youngâs mother-in-law is furious that her return to work might jeopardise her own sonâs career. Jung Yu-Mi â known for her roles in Okiâs Movie, Train to Busan and Psychokinesis â delivers a powerfully understated and award-winning performance. Her stoicism in the face of prosaic prejudice gives added weight to the film. Equally fierce is Ji-youngâs mother, whoâs vocal opposition to the men in their lives leads to a semi-breakdown on screen. The men, of course, stand about impotent in the face of emotion. When the book and film were released in Korea, headlines spoke of it increasing tensions in the local market and couples breaking up over it. The messaging is not necessarily subtle, but neither is the discrimination against women. Itâs precisely the ordinariness of these typically male viewpoints that, when taken together in a single document such as this, demonstrate how stacked the system is against career-minded women. Yet it would also be very easy to dismiss this as a Korean problem, and if this timely tale shows us anything itâs that society has a collective culpability in perpetuating it or a responsibility to instigate change. 2019 South Korean DIRECTOR Kim Do-young WRITER Kim Do-young, Yoo Young-Ah CAST Jung Yu-mi, Gong Yoo, Kim Mi-kyeong DISTRIBUTOR Little Monster Entertainment/Korean Film Festival in Australia AUS RUNNING TIME 120 minutes RELEASE DATE 29 October â 5 November 2020 KOFFIA Read more coverage of South Korean cinema from the silent era to festivals and other contemporary releases. Plus go beyond Korea with more film from Asia in Focus. About The Author
by Cho Nam-JoI knew that the Republic of Korea South Korea and India celebrate Independence Day on the 15th of August. What I didnât know was how similar the cultures of these two countries were until I read Kim Jiyoung, Born 1982. This million-copy bestseller, written by Cho Nam-Joo, translated into English by Jamie Chang with audiobook narration by Jamie Parker deserves itâs tremendous success and more. The cover with a sketch of a face framed by black hair but no features laid atop a city skyline, highlights by its absence, the commonplace life of its eponymous protagonist, Kim Jiyoung in urban South Korea. Like the simple cover, it is a simple story, simply told. What makes it special, is the way it draws in readers through its matter of fact telling of a story that plays out in every country that is burdened by patriarchy. Jiyoung, a young woman in Seoul starts showing signs of mental imbalance in the autumn of 2015, a year after the birth of her daughter. At first it seems odd to find an educated, modern young woman falling apart despite a comfortable, happily married family life but as the story unfolds, the reasons become apparent. It isnât always one moment of horrific trauma that makes people crack but the cumulative effects of a lifetime of being at the receiving end of small, thoughtless aggressions, something that girls in Korea and world over routinely face, a series of episodes that can ultimately destroy a personâs well-being. Jiyoung, the quiet, second daughter born in a traditional family where the father goes out to work while her mother stays home, observes and quickly normalises her life in a culture that prefers male children. While she is expected to share everything from a blanket to a treat with her sister, her much-younger brother gets the best portions of food, better clothes, and of course, more attention from their parents and grandmother. âIt didnât occur to the child Jiyoung that her brother was receiving special treatment, and so she wasnât even jealous. Thatâs how it had always been.âAs we follow Jiyoungâs growth through her childhood years 1982-19940, adolescence 1995-200, early adulthood 2001-2011, and marriage 2012-2015, through ordinary episodes of school and workplace bullying, family expectations before and after marriage, we uncover the myriad ways in which a personâs soul can be effaced. The unfolding of the systematic effects of patriarchy is so gradual that it doesnât come across as punitive or intentional. It is revealed for what it is, an insidious state of being . Jiyoungâs father and later, her husband, appear to be mild-mannered men of not much consequence. It is the women who are the complicit perpetrators of patriarchy. Jiyoungâs paternal grandmother, who despite her hard life with four sons and an incompetent husband a man with a fair complexion and soft hands, who never worked a day in his life doesnât resent her him because he didnât sleep around or hit her. Even though three of her four sons turn out to be ungrateful, her heartfelt wish for the only daughter-in-law, Jiyoungâs mother, who takes care of her is âYou should have a son. You must have a son. You must have at least two sons.âJiyoungâs mother is more than just the compliant meek daughter-in-law. She is the backbone of the family, the one with business savvy and foresight who uplifts the familyâs standard of living and enables her daughters but still favors her youngest child, the hardwon growth from a primarily agricultural society to an industrialised one and its impact on society provides the backdrop on which the characters grow and change, thereby enabling the transformation of the country. But they each bear the human cost of their participation in the countryâs progress as it plays out in small and large ways in their own periodic intervals, the novel provides footnotes for reference to relevant statistics on government policies and other measures. These helpful asides are not mere digressions. They add veracity to the story of one fictional protagonist who represents her generation. The introduction in Korea of family planningâ, a government sanctioned measure to limit the expanding population when combined with easy access to ultra-sound technology leads to sex-selective abortions and an alarmingly skewed gender ratio. The short-sightedness of such programmes in cultures that favour male children and the inevitable impact that serves to further exacerbate existing problems were effortlessly portrayed through Jiyoungâs life. Whether itâs her interaction with bullies or perverts or outright chauvinists, Jiyoungâs story hits uncomfortably close to makes the story work is the clinically detached narration. I admired the absence of sentimentality that kept the story moving briskly as well as the simplicity of the prose that stayed true to its purpose of just telling the story. I first heard the audiobook and then read the print version. On both occasions, I found myself getting worked up, my short breaths fanning my anger at the way people make choices to conform to the bias of society, cleanly sidestepping responsibility for all the wrongs that follow. Even as I wrote this review, I had to stop and take deep breaths to continue. What makes the novel real is not just Jiyoungâs struggle to make her way through a world that seems to be systematically wired with landmines to trip her progress, but the fact that at several points, she comes across women who in their own limited way, try to make a difference. Whether it is a young classmate in school who decides to stand up to an unfair system that puts girls at a disadvantage or the stranger on the bus who rescues her on a dark night at a bus stop and tells her âItâs not your faultâ, there are women who work within the system to uplift one woman at a time, through words or actions, however trivial they may favorite character was Jiyoungâs mother, herself a victim of a generation where female siblings willingly worked in their youth to put their brothers through school and later spent their adult life supporting their own family. With her entrepreneurial spirit and courage, she brings financial stability to her home and takes a stand to enable her daughters to have a better life than what she could do for herself. But in the end, she is a victim of her circumstances and her biases, just like the therapist who tries to piece together Jiyoungâs case in the context of his own life. The strength of the story lies both in the telling of it and in itâs conclusion that the ills of society cannot be condoned, even if it is co-opted by the majority. What it does not do is provide a neat solution, either for Jiyoung or for the reader. My opinion With translations into eighteen languages, this book should be made essential reading for girls, boys, and their parents all over the you read this book? Or come across similar books by writers from other countries? ? Drop me a note in comments.
kim ji young born 1982 review