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The Story of
a
Dwarf Family,
the Urban
Poor
A Dwarf Launches a Little Ball
Cho Se-hui, Iseonggwa Him, 2008, 351p
ISBN 89-951512-0-X 03810
It was in December of 1975 when the short story “Knifeblade,”
the first in the collection titled A Dwarf Launches a Little
Ball, was published. The mythology
surrounding this collection of short stories reached its peak
the following year, with successive publications of “The Möbius
Strip,” “Space Travel,” and “A Dwarf Launches a Little Ball.”

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The collection consists of 12 short stories,
of which the shortest comes to no more than some 40 pages in a 200
manuscript page collection. Even longer versions of the collection
come to no more than 250 manuscript pages, and can be considered
as the launch into an official career by Cho Se-hui, who had remained
silent for over a decade since his debut in 1965. Through his words,
the history of Korean literature was finally able to integrate Korea
with the shadowy aspects of its society, a result of the developmental
dictatorship in the 1970s.
The dwarf in this book is a physically
handicapped man, 117 centimeters tall (about 4 feet), and weighing 32 kilograms
(about 70 pounds). He is not just handicapped, however. His family, consisting
of his wife and three children, represents the working class of Korean society
in the 1970s, who at the time, were oppressed and marginalized in the structure
of production, consumption, and distribution. In contrast to this group was the
giant, a group of financial
conglomerates represented by the Eungang Group and the capitalists with whom
they work. Other groups do exist, such as the lower middle class and conscientious
intellectuals, represented by Sin-ae and Ji-seop. However, the collection
more acutely focuses mostly on the conflict between laborers and capitalists,
and the haves and the have-nots. They exist in different worlds, living lives
that can never be reconciled. They exploit, and are exploited, which is the method
of their conflicting existence. Would reconciliation and coexistence of the two
groups ever be possible? This is the very theme of A Dwarf Launches a Little
Ball. The realization of love, based on freedom and equality, is the link joining
the short stories in the collection.
The series of short sentences, referred
to as staccato sentences, characteristic
of the author, is the greatest contributing factor in transforming this distinct
social consciousness into a unique aesthetic. Cho opened up a new history in
the form of Korean novels by renouncing the standard of realism, experimenting
with sentences, and by being
bold enough to draw a fantasy-based reality based on fables into the narration
of his novels. He brought about a turning
point in the history of Korean novels,
which allowed for the yoking of realism
and anti-realism, and the unity of social and aesthetic aspects in literature.
As long as the questions proposed by A Dwarf Launches a Little Ball remain current,
its meaning will not be diminished. And therein lies the power that enabled this
book, first printed in 1978, like The Square by Choi In-hoon, to go through over
240 printings up to the present.
By Shin Soojeong
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