[Short Fiction Series 4]
The civil war between the North and South left both physical and psychological wounds and the permanent division of the nation still haunts those families separated by the 38th parallel. Both ¡°The Wounded¡± and ¡°An Assailant¡¯s Face¡± deal with the issues of the national trauma of the Korean War. While ¡°The Wounded¡± underscores the trauma of experiencing violence and death and the impossibility of expressing the very experience, ¡°An Assailant¡¯s Face¡± presents ambivalence and impossibility of delineating between victims and victimizers.
Both ¡°The Wounded¡± and ¡°An Assailant¡¯s Face¡± deal with the issues of the national trauma of the Korean War. While ¡°The Wounded¡± underscores the trauma of experiencing violence and death and the impossibility of expressing the very experience, ¡°An Assailant¡¯s Face¡± presents ambivalence and impossibility of delineating between victims and victimizers. . . . "