- Overview
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This book discloses the truth behind deceit and the nature of violence that we try to ignore and prompts readers not to forget what must be remembered.
- Book Intro
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The Crucible is based on a real sexual assault case perpetrated in a school for disabled youth, which was aired on a TV program in 2005 and has been widely known to the public. The descriptions of the violence and sexual assault in the novel are too terrible to read and make readers feel compelled to attempt to control their emotions. Overall, however, the story maintains its balance and objectivity. The book vividly captures the conflicts between the education office, city hall, the police office, churches, and other authorities that have power and collude with the school in Mujin, as well as those who try to uncover the case, including Kang Inho, assistant administrator of Mujin Human Rights Center Seo Yujin, minister Choi Yohan, and the mother of the victim child. In addition, the nature of evil and our unconsciousness that tolerate deceit are illustrated in a way that reflects Korean society, while the sense of balance maintained throughout the story is unlike other serious novels that critique societal issues.
But how much has the world changed since the accident? The hell described in The Crucible is not just the city of Mujin, an imaginary distance place, but the ground on which we stand. In the novel, the scholar inspector and city hall officers only shift the blame onto others, the lawyer defends the perpetrator even when the truth of the incident is obvious to everyone, and the poor parents of the victim child end up settling out of court as they are not able to find any other way. People with vested rights are firmly connected to each other as university colleagues, seniors. and juniors, exam colleagues, uncles, parents-in-law of high school alumni, the son-in-law’s old teachers, etc., and they are the same people whom we can easily witness in our daily lives.
- About the Author
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Gong Jiyoung
Gong Jiyeong was born in Seoul in 1963 and graduated from the Department of English Literature at Yonsei University. She made her literary debut in 1988 by publishing the short story she wrote while in prison, “The Dawning Day,”in the literary journal Creation and Criticism. In 1989, she published her first full-length novel, No More Beautiful Wandering, and opened the door to a new era of feminist literature by women through her work Go Alone Like the Horn of a Rhinoceros, published in 1993. In 1994 her works Mackerel and Respect for Human Beings became successive bestsellers , making her the most beloved author in Korea.
- Recommendation
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"Silenced is a masterpiece that evokes people's beautiful and scathing spirits in a period where our fundamental values are regressing." - Park Won-sun (the Mayor of Seoul city)