![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() A lot of the time, the historical event addressed isn’t something I knew much about in the past, but that I can clearly see reflected in the present. We’ve all heard many times that knowing the past is important so that we don’t repeat our mistakes, and often literary fiction (or really any type of fiction) serve as a reminder of this. It’s a bit frightening to think that all over the world, people’s attempts at having a voice are denied and suppressed, and it makes me worry for the future here. From the violence committed against protestors and innocents, to the erasure of history, the two events don’t necessarily match completely, but they’re similar enough that it served as a reminder that this is hardly the only place or time that this has happened. ![]() There’s quite a lot in here that makes me think of the Black Lives Matter protests and the seemingly continuous unveiling of crimes committed by police officers. The violence and attempts at censorship feel relevant even years later and across the world. Anyone protesting the government is arrested and tortured or killed. The end of World War II brings American occupation and even worse atrocities. An adult Young-sook attends one and watches a child trampled under a police horse and the angry crowd shot at. One of Young-sook’s early memories is attending a protest with her mother, and protests continue throughout the book, growing more dangerous. ![]()
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