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Not Everything Unfolds As Anticipated: Selections from Yi Kyubos Tongguk Yi Sangguk Chip [Kõva köide]

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Yi Kyubo (11681241) was the foremost writer and poet of the Kory dynasty (9181392). Not Everything Unfolds as Anticipated is a miscellany of work from his Tongguk Yi Sangguk chip, a collection containing more than two thousand texts and considered the earliest substantial oeuvre of a Kory writer to date. The present work comprises translations of poems, tales, letters, epitaphs, and funeral orations, as well as "The Cantefable of King Tongmyng," Yis famous poem chronicling Korys mythological past. Also included are forewords and afterwords to books no longer extant that shed light on the intellectual, literary, and printing habits of the time.

Yi is best remembered as a literary figure, but for much of his career, he served as a composer of official government texts. Accordingly, a large number of his writings tell us about Yi the bureaucrat and administrator and military rule in early thirteenth-century Kory. Many of the administrative changes brought about during this period of intense transformation are recounted in Yis writings, such as the dethroning and enthroning of rulers by the Choe military and the governments official reaction to the collapse of the Jurchen Jin state, Korys nominal suzerain. Almost up until the day he died, Yi remained the main author of diplomatic texts sent to the invading Mongol armies.

Not Everything Unfolds as Anticipated not only reveals the existential truths of human life as recorded by the brush of medieval Koreas most gifted poet, but also offers a many-faceted view of a formative period in Korean history.
Remco E. Breuker is professor of Korean studies at Leiden University.