Scenes from the Enlightenment: A Novel of Manners was published in 1939,
toward the end of the Japanese colonial period in Korea, and depicts
seemingly trivial events in the lives of the residents of a small town
northeast of Pyongyang: a wedding between two local families, the
arrival of box upon box of fascinating new Western products at the
Japanese-run general store, a long-awaited athletics meet held at the
local school. But in these events, and in the changing familial and
social relationships that underpin them, we see a picture of a changing
Korea on the cusp of modernity. When two boys decide to cut their hair
in the Western fashion, the reader sees the conflict between tradition
and modernity presented not in abstract terms, but in one of the myriad
ways it affected the lives of those who lived through this time of
change.