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초고령사회와 영케어러 문제에 대한 문학적 고찰: 『로스트 케어』와 『52헤르츠 고래들』비교 연구를 중심으로A Literary Exploration of the Young Carer Issue in a Super-Aged Society: A Comparative Study of Lost Care and 52 Hertz no Kujiratachi

Other Titles
A Literary Exploration of the Young Carer Issue in a Super-Aged Society: A Comparative Study of Lost Care and 52 Hertz no Kujiratachi
Authors
고준호김성규
Issue Date
Dec-2025
Publisher
한국동서비교문학학회
Keywords
super-aged society; young carers; caregiving; Lost Care; 52 Hertz no Kujiratachi
Citation
동서비교문학저널, no.74, pp 77 - 99
Pages
23
Indexed
KCI
Journal Title
동서비교문학저널
Number
74
Start Page
77
End Page
99
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/63624
DOI
10.29324/jewcl.2025.12.74.77
ISSN
1229-2745
2288-5498
Abstract
This study explores the intersection of aging, caregiving, and literary representation in the context of South Korea’s transition into a super-aged society. With over 20% of the Korean population aged 65 or older as of 2025, the nation faces a rapidly intensifying caregiving crisis. The phenomenon of young carers—youths or young adults who bear family caregiving responsibilities—has emerged as a significant social issue, yet remains under-recognized and insufficiently supported. Through comparative literary analysis of Hamanaka Aki’s Lost Care and Machida Sonoko’s 52 Hertz no Kujiratachi, both set in Japan, this article examines how fiction reflects and critiques the psychological and ethical dilemmas of caregiving in aging societies. Lost Care exposes the moral paradox of “salvation through killing” within Japan’s collapsing care system, while 52 Hertz no Kujiratachi reveals the invisible suffering of female young carers trapped in domestic abuse and unpaid emotional labor. Drawing on demographic data and interdisciplinary research, the paper situates these works within the broader East Asian caregiving crisis and introduces the concept of a “collective young-carer society,” in which an entire younger generation inevitably assumes responsibility for an expanding elderly population. Ultimately, this study argues that literature not only mirrors social realities but also anticipates ethical imperatives for intergenerational solidarity and policy reform in post-industrial aging societies.
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