Back
Han Kang: Human Acts (Paperback, 2017, Hogarth)

Amid a violent student uprising in South Korea, a young boy named Dong-ho is shockingly …

The work you did as a teenager, though, was different.

Those were fifteen-hour days with only two days off per month. "Weekends" were nonexistent. The wages were half of what the men got paid for the same work, and there was no overtime pay. You took pills to keep you awake, but exhaustion still battered you like a wave. The swelling of your calves and feet as morning wore into afternoon. The guards who insisted on body-searching the female workers every night before they went home. Those hands, which used to linger when they touched your bra. The shame. Hacking coughs. Nosebleeds. Headaches. Clumps of what looked like black threads in the phlegm you hacked up.

We are noble.

Human Acts by  (Page 152)