This study analyzes the “resurgence” phenomenon of Yang Gui-ja’s 1998 novel Contradictions (Mosun) in the 2020s through the lens of “Text Hip”—a burgeoning concept in platform-era reading culture—and the socialization of reading tastes. The primary objective is not to prove a shift in the inherent meaning of the text, but rather to track the pathways through which the same text is re-summoned, circulated, and imbued with “presentness” by aligning with contemporary reading sensibilities. Thus, the study examines how readers’ tastes are visualized as relational and social senses. Previous discussions of her novel, Contradictions, have largely focused on explaining the ending through the protagonist Ahn Jin-jin’s marital choices. While interpretive frameworks such as realistic judgment, survival strategies, class consciousness, or moral labeling have rendered the ending an intelligible event, they have often prematurely “sealed” the interpretation, leaving the state of “suspended judgment” —which the text maintains until the very end— largely unproblematized. This study shifts the perspective, reframing the conflict surrounding Ahn, Jin-jin’s choice not as a moral binary of right and wrong, but as a means of differentiating the ways in which readers “sense” that choice. By presenting the conditions and context of choice without providing an explicit value judgment, Contradictions leaves the reader with a period of staying rather than a conclusion. For contemporary readers, this incomplete state functions as a projection space where they can overlap their experiences with the text. In the digital platform environment, this sensibility is reinforced through “sentences” rather than “scenes.” The novel Contradictions is remembered less for its plot resolution than for its quotable lines, which circulate as excerpts, images, and shareable fragments. In this context, quotation does not serve to finalize interpretation, but to mark the moment and mode in which readers recognize themselves within the text. This phenomenon becomes more legible through Pierre Bourdieu’s theory of cultural capital. Although reading has traditionally been understood as an embodied cultural capital accumulated through time and training, in the digital platform era, it has transitioned into a sensory asset that is immediately displayed through images and citations. Algorithmic recommendations and community interactions trigger repetitive exposure to specific texts, which, in turn, prompt rereading and citation. Through this process, taste expands beyond individual inclinations into a collectively visualized social sense. By eschewing moralistic conclusions in favor of a narrative that suspends judgment, Contradictions invites diverse responses and re-citations. Furthermore, by providing sharable sentences that require no additional explanation, it functions as a text perfectly suited to this circular structure. Ultimately, the resurgence of interest in Contradictions is understood as a product of the shifting platform environment, where reading has evolved from private understanding to a display of taste within relationships, rather than a result of inherent textual transformation. Rather than capturing the “presentness” of the novel through internal semantic shifts, this study does so through changes in reading pathways—mediated by selection, excerpting, and sharing—and the socialization of a sensibility that suspends judgment. This perspective suggests that literary studies must move beyond text-centric interpretation to consider changes in reading environments and sensibilities, demonstrating the validity of “Text Hip” as an analytical framework for explaining the re-reception of classic texts in the digital platform era.
So Yeon Kim (Tue,) studied this question.