This is a challenging book to read, given my own personal history, but after scratching my head a bit when I finished it I came to reflect on this spiritual side of it.My own vegetarianism was an ethical decision.I realize that I can’t and shouldn’t impose my ethics on others, but I’ve not had much resistance from others (apart from colleagues who occasionally make reservations at eateries with no hint of the concept).Likewise, I became a vegan a few years back based on further reflection of an ethical kind.This is actually a spiritual practice.I don’t often express it in those terms, but clearly it is.In the novel when Yeong-hye’s brother-in-law tries to direct her life, he takes her to a Buddhist restaurant because he knows nowhere else to find vegetarian offerings.
Yeong-hye believes herself to be becoming a plant, and that leads to the next logical step in this progression of thinking.Eating is, or at least can be, a spiritual exercise.Many religions advocate fasts of various durations to derive the benefits to the soul.Daily life is a matter of routine for many, often based around our culturally driven mandate of three meals a day.I’m not alone at working through lunch while trying to get more done at my job.By the final meal of the day I find myself exhausted. It’s about more than food.This strange little book has put me into a reverie about the ethics of eating.I don’t know if Han Kang is a vegetarian or not, but she does understand the soul of one.