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Hwang Jung eun

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Language
  
Korean

Height
  
1.67 m

Hangul
  
황정은

Role
  
Actress


Ethnicity
  
Korean

Name
  
Hwang Jung-eun

Nationality
  
South Korean

McCune–Reischauer
  
Hwang Chong'un

Siblings
  
Hwang Min, Hwang Hoon

Hwang Jung-eun Hwang Jung Eum Korean Actor amp Actress

Movies
  
Death Bell 2: Bloody Camp, My Sister, The Pig Lady, The Relation of Face, Mind and Love, Wish

Awards
  
PaekSang Arts Award for Best New Actress in Television

TV shows
  
Kill Me - Heal Me, Secret Love, We Got Married, High Kick Through The Roof, Endless Love

Similar People
  
Park Seo‑joon, Ji Sung, Go Joon‑hee, Choi Siwon, Kim Yong‑jun

Profiles


Revised Romanization
  
Hwang Jeong-eun

Hwang Jung Eun (born 1976) is a South Korean writer and podcast celebrity.

Contents

Hwang Jung-eun the heart has not reasonsoulamplove hwang jung eun amp ji

Life

Hwang Jung-eun cecec2528b964b9ca826d779b3e920d7jpeg

Author Hwang Jung Eun was born in 1976 at Seoul, South Korea. Hwang learned Korean at a younger age than most kids and was very skilled in learning new words (Kyeonggi Ilbo). She started writing her collection of books after being selected in the Novel Field of 2005 Kyunghyang Sinmun Annual Spring Literary Contest.

Work

Hwang Jung-eun Hwang Jungeum cast as lead in new drama Dramabeans

After her debut, Hwang won the 2010 Hanguk Ilbo Literature Award and through her "Into the World of Passi" won the Shing Dong Yeob Literature award in 2013. Hwang also hosted two podcasts. One was the "Author's Room" section of the 2012 Sound of Munjang and the other one was the “Radio Book Dabang” from January 2013 to May 2015. Her latest book "Let Me Continue" is also available as an audio book which is a service provided by ‘The Book’ (Simin Ilbo). Hwang has one work translated into English by Asia Publisher, titled Kong’s Garden and was one of four featured speakers at a bilingual author’s roundtable in Myeongdong Seoul on September 12, 2015

Hwang Jung-eun Hwang Jung Eum

Korean Literature Now Magazine sums Hwangs work up:

Hwang Jung-eun Hwang Jeongeum Korean actress singer
Hwang perceptively portrays the pain of those living in a space that cannot possibly be represented by the word “slum,” a space always in danger of falling into ruin. She illustrates the fiery trace of lives that cannot be compensated for, and life’s suffering that cannot be converted into money. The stories from her collection The Seven Thirty-two Elephant Train also depict the marginalized pushed out to the edge of the city lines. Her stories lend voice to the small, frail voices drowned out by the extravagant noise of the city and the groaning of the masses barely audible under the sound of cell phones and TVs—voices so painful to hear that one is tempted to cover the ears. Her stories contain these disappearing voices. Hwang Jung-eun’s novels are an open-mic rally for the homeless and the abandoned children.
Hwang Jung-eun Hwang Jungeum Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

  • Kong’s Garden, Asia Publishers, 2015
  • Awards

  • 2010 Hanguk Ilbo Literature Award
  • Novels

  • 《百의 그림자》 (민음사, 2010)
  • 《야만적인 앨리스씨》 (문학동네, 2013)
  • 《계속해보겠습니다》 (창비, 2014)
  • Short story/novel collections

  • 《일곱시 삼십이분 코끼리열차》 (문학동네, 2008)
  • 《파씨의 입문》 (창비, 2012)
  • Novels

  • 《Kong's Garden》 (Asia Publishers, 2015)
  • 《One Hundred Shadows》 (Tilted Axis Press, 2016)
  • References

    Hwang Jung-eun Wikipedia