Against a backdrop of rising anti-feminist pushback across South Korea, a growing cohort of female writers and storytellers are building a grassroots, community-centered movement to claim space for women’s unfiltered voices—a shift that author Eunyu describes as a “slow-but-sure revolution.”
When Seen Aromi’s 2024 memoir celebrating the joys of intentional singlehood hit bookstores, it quickly climbed to the top of bestseller lists. *So What if I Love My Single Life!* resonated across generations and relationship statuses: women from all walks of life drew comfort from Seen’s unapologetic rejection of unsolicited social pressure, and many found validation in choosing a life centered on their own priorities. But the book’s runaway success also sparked a tidal wave of online vitriol, largely from male readers who attacked Seen, predicted she would die alone, labeled her selfish, and even accused her of betraying the nation for rejecting traditional marital and maternal norms.
Gender-based discrimination, harassment, and sexual violence remain pervasive systemic challenges in South Korea, where the term “feminism” has become deeply polarizing, often wielded as a damning accusation that triggers online witch hunts and professional or social censure. As young men have led a widespread backlash against gender equality advocacy, openly embracing female independence has become increasingly risky. Yet even in this charged climate, women have carved out a growing, vibrant niche in the country’s literary landscape to share their lived experiences.
The movement reached a historic milestone this year, when women took home top honors in all six categories of South Korea’s most prestigious literary honor, the Yi Sang Awards—a first in the prize’s history. Beyond institutional recognition, community-focused spaces for women writers and readers, called guelbang, have sprung up across the country. These reading and writing rooms offer women dedicated time and space to gather, connect, and grow as a collective. Even beyond the 2024 Nobel Prize in Literature won by iconic South Korean author Han Kang, which cemented Korean women’s writing on the global stage, women’s voices were long sidelined in the country’s mainstream literary scene. The 2016 South Korean MeToo movement, Eunyu notes, was a critical turning point that encouraged ordinary women to speak up about their experiences. Eunyu, who launched her own writing space back in 2011, says that even as backlash against feminist-aligned work grew, more women stepped forward to lead writing workshops and reading sessions, making these community spaces accessible to women who had never before shared their stories. “Many of the women who joined as attendees have gone on to become writers in their own right,” Eunyu explains. “I’ve seen countless instances of attendees digesting their pain, restoring their sense of self and confidence through the act of writing. While these shifts are deeply personal, when they unfold in a community they can often inspire a chain of reaction. In that sense, what we’re witnessing here is a slow-but-sure revolution.”
Seen’s story of intentional singlehood represents a radical break from South Korea’s long-held social norms: at 39, she purchased a home in the countryside, bucking the national trend of concentrating population in the greater Seoul area, and chose to forgo marriage and children at a time when the government is scrambling to reverse one of the world’s lowest birth rates. She embraces the quiet joy of her self-designed life, from harvesting fresh vegetables for homemade salads to writing in a home decorated entirely to her taste. “I’m not claiming that everyone should abandon marriage or look down on married people in any way,” Seen clarifies. “I simply wrote about how making my own choices, prioritising my desires, has led me to truly enjoy my life. I felt that people were really waiting to hear stories like mine.” Readers have echoed that sentiment: “As someone who’s been questioning whether marriage is really right for me, this book made me tune into my inner voice,” one online reviewer wrote. Another commented, “My life might have been different if I’d read this book before I married. Back then, I never realised that marriage was optional.” The memoir’s success has earned Seen a six-figure international translation deal with Penguin Random House, placing her work in front of a global audience.
Seen is far from alone in this breakthrough. Buoyed by swelling global interest in Korean culture, sales of translated Korean books more than doubled in 2024 compared to the previous year, opening new international doors for South Korean women writers. The resulting body of work is richly varied, spanning genres from thriller to sci-fi to memoir to historical fantasy: Gu Byeong-mo’s *The Old Woman With the Knife* follows a legendary 60s-year-old assassin navigating retirement and loneliness; Kim Cho-yeop’s sci-fi anthology *If We Cannot Go at the Speed of Light* tells the story of a stranded scientist dedicating her life to reuniting with her family light-years away; singer and author Lang Lee unpacks intergenerational trauma from the Korean War to domestic violence that haunted the women of her family after her sister’s suicide; and Esther Park’s *The Legend of Lady Byeoksa* reimagines the story of a cross-dressing Joseon-era demon slayer and her doomed love, echoing the popularity of hit K-culture projects like *Demon Hunters*.
As South Korea’s public discourse around gender has grown increasingly hostile, the literary world has emerged as a critical outlet for conversations that can no longer safely happen in mainstream public spaces. In recent years, high-profile anti-feminist campaigns have targeted public figures ranging from A-list actors Gong Yoo and Bae Suzy to K-pop idols. Male fans have even burned merchandise from female artists after discovering they read feminist books or carried phone cases with pro-women messaging. In response, many South Koreans, both women and men, have embraced what they call “stealthy feminism” to avoid professional and social retaliation. For countless women, guelbang and other women-centered literary gatherings offer a much-needed escape from the suffocating pressure to self-censor.
On a recent Saturday afternoon, 50 women lined up outside a repurposed old church on a quiet street in Daejeon, 160 kilometers south of Seoul, to attend a talk by feminist author Ha Mina. Attendees traveled from across the country, and one even brought her toddler daughter along. Ha, who leads the community writing workshops, explains that in a country defined by cutthroat competition and relentless social pressure, these gatherings offer something transformative: “We listen to each other’s stories here — and that experience can be transformative, especially amid Korea’s cut-throat competition and the immense pressure to succeed. But these workshops are a safe space for women to make mistakes and grow, perhaps for the first time in their lives.” Ha, an aspiring writer early in her career, recalls that toxic, predatory behavior was rampant in writing workshops led by male writers and poets. It was only when she joined a class led by a female mentor that she found her voice. Her first critically acclaimed book, *Crazy, Freaky, Arrogant and Brilliant Women*, draws on interviews with 30 young South Korean women to explore the link between widespread female depression and restrictive social expectations and gendered violence. Making these stories public, Ha says, was a deeply healing act: “I stopped having suicidal thoughts after publishing this book. Isn’t that incredible?”
Beyond the push for systemic change, what unites most of the women drawn to this movement is a simple desire: a room of their own, a space where they can speak freely without fear of judgment or retaliation. “I don’t need to censor myself, whether we are talking about our experience of sexual violence, discrimination, or our desires and sexuality,” says 28-year-old Kim Gahyun, who traveled to Daejeon for Ha Mina’s talk. Meeting other women from varied backgrounds has shifted her perspective: “Womanhood is not a singular experience and we can’t be boxed into the same category.”
That celebration of diversity resonates deeply with 36-year-old Choi Suwon: “It’s not just women, people of all sorts of minority backgrounds bring their unique stories to the table, and we listen to each other no matter how far they are from ‘the norm.’ Writing and sharing my stories in these spaces make me feel a deep sense of liberation.” For 29-year-old Lee Hae, who traveled two hours by bullet train from Daegu to attend author Lee Sulla’s “book concert” in Seoul, the gatherings are a much-needed personal joy. “I love reading Lee’s and other contemporary women writers’ works, because I can really empathise with these stories,” she says.
Lee Sulla, whose subversive debut novel *In The Age of Filiarchy* was named the most popular work by a contemporary Korean writer in a 2023 poll by one of the country’s largest booksellers, reimagines traditional family dynamics in her bestseller. The novel’s protagonist, a successful independent publisher, becomes the head of her family, reversing generations of patriarchal structure: she hires her mother, Bokhee, as a paid chef and assistant, and her father as a paid driver and housekeeper. For the first time, Bokhee receives fair compensation for her lifelong domestic labor, while her father, stripped of his traditional patriarchal authority, finds contentment in his quiet daily routine of cleaning, caring for the family cats, and driving his daughter around the city. Lee’s understated, warm, humorous writing has made the book a nationwide hit, and she notes that even older men attend her talks. But it is her gentle reimagining of gender and family that has captured the hearts of so many women. “What I depict are not grand, ground-shaking events, only small shifts in the dynamics of a family,” Lee says. “But these can be potent enough to create a completely new order.”









