Korea1 Essay, Research Paper
A Brief Commentary on the Meaning, Societal Relevance, and Use of Subtlety in Ch’oe Inhon’sThe BoozerMarch 11, 1996″Whenever a shot of that rotgut washed the inside of his everinsatiable mouth he knew justhow much more dense his life was going to get” (Ch’oe, 109). Ch’oe Inho’s The Boozer offersa dismal glimpse into the life of the lower classes during the period of Koreanmodernization. Although The Boozer was written in the 1960s, the story does not provide anallegorical account of particular events during the authoritarian rule of Park Chung Hee.Rather, Ch’oe uses the setting of a working class community to convey the suffering of anorphan boy over the loss of his parents during one of his escapades into the tavern life ofthe town. In addition, Ch’oe withholds from the reader the most important piece ofinformation, that the boy indeed has no living parents, until the end of the story. Througha clever manipulation of information, The Boozer accomplishes the latter task, while givingus a vivid sense of the boy’s traumatic memory of his parents’ deaths and of the desolatelife of the working class community. In the first few pages of the story, we are lead tobelieve that the boy is looking for his father to call him home to the bedside of his dyingwife. The boy informs the drinkers in the tavern that he has seen his mother’s conditionworsen and that she has sent him to get her husband. But even before this, Ch’oe hasalready dropped a subtle hint that the father is gone. Here is how the boy describes hisfather:”Why, you’d know him! He has a great big mole over one eye. He always smelled like onions,and he always went around with cloves of garlic in his back pocket. And, they said healways cried when he drank.” (104) The boy starts his description in the present tense andshifts to the past tense as he recounts details about his father’s habits. This passagealone casts the first shadow of doubt on the “living” status of the father. In particular,the phrase “they said he….” suggests that the boy experienced his father’s death at anearly age and knows him partly from reputation. This use of the past tense may be toosubtle to notice upon a first reading and even the impression that the father may be longgone is erased as the boy later speaks about his father in the present tense. There arenumerous other indicators that mislead us into believing the authenticity of the boy’smission. For example, the boy is quite determined in his mission. “I’ll look all night…. If I can just find my father, everything will be okay My father’sdifferent from you people. Father may be a boozer, but there’s nothing he can’t do if hesets his mind to it. You know, once he took copper and made it into gold. Gold!” (105). In this passage we also encounter the boy’s genuine admiration for his father and thesecurity the thought of his father provides, as if the latter were alive and well, waitingfor his son to find him. In addition, he shows concern about his father’s sobriety, so thatthe latter can face the serious moment of his wife’s death in full possession of hisfaculties. There is one moment where it appears that the father may have already returnedto his wife and, after her death, gone back out to drink: “Your father left, kid. Said hewas going to the widow’s tavern” (107). The inconsistency here is that the boy isunperturbed by the barmaid’s usage of the word “widow.” But, given his drunken state, wemay forgive the boy for overlooking this. Later, as the boy continues wandering through thetown, we are informed that “He knew well where it was he was going to. He had neverforgotten this route, no matter how drunk he got” (112). This is the first direct hint thatthe boy’s actions are not spontaneous attempts to find his father but a part of awell-established routine that he follows after a day of drinking. But the followingsentence reverts the reader’s attention to the search for the father: “What could Father bedoing while Mother is heading to her death?” (112). By the end of the story, and after manysubtle hints and inconsistencies, we are left with the uncomfortable thought that we havemissed something. It is past the taverns’ closing time when the boy visits his aunt. Whyhas he not found his father? Was he really looking for him? Why hasn’t he returned to hishome, to his dying mother? It is not until the end that we are given an obvious hint thatsomething in the boy’s story is wrong. When he visits his aunt, the boy says “Auntie.Please don’t die before I grow up. Grit your teeth and bear it.” Only at this point are wegiven a hint that the boy has survived the death of his family members, or perhaps even hisfriends, that maybe his aunt is the only living relative he has left. His parents are gone,his siblings are gone, lost, or nonexistent. As far as we can tell, the boy has no closeties with any relative because even his aunt treats him more like a pest which must bedisposed of as soon as possible, and as the boy leaves her house she bids him “Good-bye.And don’t come back!” (114). Prior to this incident, Ch’oe makes no obvious references tothe loss of the boy’s parents. A few lines later, we find out that the boy is returning tohis orphanage. The search for the father was just a fa ade. With this in mind, a closerreading of The Boozer reveals that the boy’s desperate search for his father is amanifestation of the boy’s psychological trauma caused by the untimely deaths of hisparents. The boy has a vivid memory of his mother’s death, of her bloody vomiting (105).
In all likelihood, this was followed by a desperate attempt t
Ch’oe Inhon. “The Boozer.” Land of Exile: Contemporary Korean Fiction. Bruce Fulton,Ju-Chan Fulton, and Marshall R. Pihl, eds. M.E. Sharpe, Incorporated: New York, 1993. Eckert et al. Korea Old and New: A History. Ilchokak Publishers: Seoul, 1990.