Ships from: Minneapolis, MN
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(Paperback)
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Comments from the Seller: 1997 Paperback Good Former Library Book, usual stamps and stickers some cover wear, pages okay.
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Seller Name: Books For The Future
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(371 ratings)
Authorized Seller Since: 2007
Ships From: Minneapolis, MN
From turn-of-the-century Korea comes the true story of a courageous young girl who was disguised as a boy so that she could attend school.
Although only men and boys were allowed to go to school in Korea, Induk Pahk's mother believed that Induk could learn as well as any boy. So she dressed Induk in pants made from the cloth of her own skirt and sent her off to school. As Induk walked into the classroom, the row of fifteen boys turned to stare at her. Did they guess her secret? Would they believe she was a boy? The Girl-Son, written in first-person narrative, is based on the true story of one girl's courage and determination to challenge tradition in order to create equal opportunities for all children in her country.
Based on the life of Induk Pahk, a Korean educator, whose widowed mother disguised her as a boy at the age of eight in order for her to attend school, a choice forbidden to girls in the early twentieth century in that country.
The Girl Son is a compelling story about a mother's love and her daughter's desire and determination to get an education even though it is forbidden in their native country, Korea. The story begins with the birth of Induk Pahk at the start of the twentieth century. Her father and brother are lost to cholera, and her poor and illiterate mother decides that Induk will get an education no matter what the cost. Induk gets her early education disguised as a boy. Mother and daughter make enormous sacrifices to achieve their dreams. The text is well written in simple language, but tells a powerful story everyone should read.
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