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Han

한 / 恨 · hahn · Korean · noun
negativeintensity: highsadnessanger

A complex emotional cluster commonly translated “resentful sorrow”.

Definition

A complex emotional cluster commonly translated “resentful sorrow” — grief, resentment, unresolved injustice, helplessness, and a suppressed urge for redress.

Connotation & usage

Described by Suh Nam-dong as “unresolved resentment against injustices suffered… an obstinate urge to take revenge and to right the wrong.” Often claimed (controversially) as an essential Korean trait.

Literal sense

The hanja 恨 means “resentment / grudge / regret.”

Related words

Etymology

Sino-Korean reading of the Chinese character 恨 “resentment/regret.” Similar concepts exist across East Asian languages; the ethnonationalist inflection is specific to Korea.

How it has changed

The word existed in the Joseon era but was “rather obscure.” Per scholar Sandra So Hee Chi Kim, the concept “emerged as a significant ideological concept during the 1970s,” crystallizing as a national-essence concept in the postcolonial era.

Dispute & caveat

DISPUTED & POLITICIZED: The claim that han is a timeless, defining feature of the Korean soul is contested. Scholars (Kim 2017, Minsoo Kang, Pilzer) argue a national culture of han did not exist in premodern Korea, and that the modern concept is partly a postcolonial reworking of a Japanese colonial-era stereotype (Yanagi Sōetsu's “beauty of sorrow”). The word is real; its status as national essence is constructed.

Sources

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From The Lexicon of Feeling — a carefully sourced dictionary & thesaurus of emotions across 60 languages. Definitions are verified against the cited sources; emotion-family, valence, and intensity tags are editorial. This is a learning tool for emotional vocabulary, not therapy or a substitute for professional care. © 2026 The Lexicon of Feeling.