2013, as a freshmen, I tried running away from the artistic military discipline. 2015, in my sophomore year, I confronted with Sewol Ferry disaster and the pain of others, behind the screen. 2016 in my junior year, I survived from the misogynic survival. 2017, at the final year of college I fought and won against my case of retributive defamation. is a public question and a private record of mundane discrimination and misogynic oppression that a woman in her 20s has experienced living in hell-like Korea.
JANG Seo-jin is an activist who has worked as a project manager at the nonprofit social justice organization THE NEXT for 3 years as well as a change maker at the Haja Production School, an alternative school, for 2 years after dropping out of high school. Her best known project is the NEXT QUESTION 2016, a 100-day conference that was co-organized with the Changbi School. A project that posed questions and brought together and perspectives to change the future of Korean society, NEXT QUESTION 2016 aimed to provide a space of discussion and collaboration for experts across fields, as well as young innovators.