Exploring Identity in Korean Diaspora Fiction: A Character Analysis of Henry Park in Chang-Rae Lee’s Native Speaker

Authors

KANG Byoung Yoong
University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Arts, Slovenia

Synopsis

This study examines the complex identity issues faced by Henry Park, the protagonist of Chang-Raeja Lee’s novel Native Speaker, through the lens of Hannah Arendt’s concepts of the pariah and parvenu. By examining Hen­ry’s experiences as a 1.5-generation Korean-American immigrant, this analysis elucidates the tensions between cultural assimilation and heritage preservation. The study describes Henry as a “Lesser Stranger”, a nuanced identity state situated between complete alienation and full assimilation. Furthermore, the analysis draws parallels with Frantz Fanon’s Black Skin, White Masks in order to gain further insight into Henry’s internal conflict and external societal pressures. In conclusion, this paper offers a compre­hensive examination of the Korean-American experience, contributing to broader discussions on diaspora, identity, and cultural integration.

This contribution is a translation of an article originally published in the journal Asian Studies (Volume XIII, Supplement, 2025).

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Published

April 17, 2026

How to Cite

Kang, B. Y. (2026). Exploring Identity in Korean Diaspora Fiction: A Character Analysis of Henry Park in Chang-Rae Lee’s Native Speaker. In N. Visočnik Gerželj (Ed.), & S. Struna & J. Bavec (Trans.), Korejska diaspora in književnost: Vol. Koreanistika 001 (pp. 13-34). University of Ljubljana Press. https://ebooks.uni-lj.si/ZalozbaUL/catalog/book/913/chapter/4756