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Eeyore (/ ˈ iː ɔːr / ⓘ EE-or) is a fictional character in the Winnie-the-Pooh books by A. A. Milne. He is an old, grey stuffed donkey and friend of the title character, Winnie-the-Pooh. Eeyore is generally characterised as pessimistic , depressed , and anhedonic .
The Korean Newspaper Archive [1] (Korean: 대한민국 신문 아카이브; lit. Republic of Korea Newspaper Archive) is a South Korean newspaper archive operated by the National Library of Korea (NLK). In recent years, the archive has been digitizing its newspapers, and making both the scans and searchable text available to the public, free of ...
[9] Others in the west found it unprecedented for a South Korean book to address mental health so poignantly, which Hur refuted as a "condescending reaction" resulting from "prejudices and ignorance", as the book was "hardly the first time a Korean writer has talked about depression" and self-help was already "a thriving genre" around the book ...
The Foreign Languages Publishing House (FLPH) is the central North Korean publishing bureau of foreign-language documents, located in the Potonggang-guyok of Pyongyang, North Korea. [1] It employs a small group of foreigners to revise translations of North Korean texts so as to make those texts suitable for foreign-language publication.
Chon Young-Ae (Korean: 전영애; Hanja: 全英愛; Korean pronunciation: [tɕʌn. jʌŋ.ɛ]; born 1951) is a literary scholar and poet from South Korea. She is an honorary professor emeritus in the Department of German Language and Literature at Seoul National University, specializing in German poetry. She held the position of department head ...
ASIA Publishers (Korean: 도서출판 아시아; RR: Doseochulpan Asi-a) is a Seoul-based book publisher best known for producing multi-volume series of translated Korean literature in bilingual format, generally at novella length and usually featuring a short biography of the author, a background of the social and historical setting of the work, and a brief collection of Korean critical ...
Janseogak (Korean: 장서각) is a Korean history archive operated by the Academy of Korean Studies near Seoul, South Korea. The collection focuses on works dealing with traditional Korean history and culture, and has its origins in the royal library once held at the palace Changdeokgung .
The Korean versions of the dialogs are written in a colloquial style, giving unique insight into Late Middle Korean. [8] A third edition, the Nogeoldae eonhae, was published in 1670 by the Bureau of Interpreters. [17] It has the same Chinese text as the Beonyeok Nogeoldae, but the right readings and translations were updated to contemporary Korean.