The Vegetarian Summary
The Vegetarian Summary
The Vegetarian Summary
Part two, "Mongolian Mark," takes place two years after Yeong-hye's transport to the hospital
and is narrated by her brother-in-law. He is never given a name, but we learn he is a video artist.
After offhandedly learning that Yeong-hye (his wife, In-hye's, younger sister) still has a
Mongolian Mark, he begins to fantasize about a love-making scene between two people whose
bodies are covered in painted flowers due to the fact that the Mongolian Mark is described as a
blue petal-shaped birthmark that does not typically remain on the body into adulthood.
Part two opens with a scene where Yeong-hye's brother-in-law steals away to see an erotic dance
performance with performers adorned in painted flowers, but the show ultimately fails to
actualize his vision. He eventually realizes his only option to fulfill his artistic pursuit is to
convince Yeong-hye to be a part of his video project while also coming to terms with his
physical attraction towards her. Though he successfully convinces her to be a part of the erotic
video project, his plan to include his fellow artist friend, J, in the video falls through when he
instructs J to have sex with Yeong-hye during filming. Yeong-hye's brother-in-law eventually
succumbs to his desires and participates as her counterpart in the video himself. Part two ends in
a scene where In-hye discovers her husband in bed with her sister the morning after filming the
video, and In-hye subsequently calls emergency services on them.
In-hye narrates the third and final part of the novel, "Flaming Trees," which takes place one year
after the events of "Mongolian Mark," though it often flashes back to recount her side of the
story of her husband's absence and their failed marriage. She explains that Yeong-hye's
vegetarianism has spiraled into mental illness, and now abstains not just from eating meat, but
from most forms of human interaction. After the brutal force-feeding attempt by their father,
Yeong-hye was hospitalized.
Despite receiving specialized treatment, she maintained her belief that the only way to avoid the
brutality that humans inflict upon each other and animals is to become a plant. This is what
compelled her to accept her brother-in-law's proposal to be part of his erotic video project, and
she adopted a fondness for having the flowers painted on her body. We also discover that her
brother-in-law attempted to commit suicide by jumping from her apartment's balcony when In-
hye called emergency services on them. He remains mostly absent from the remainder of the
novel save for an attempt to see their son, Ji-woo.
Mr. Cheong also became an absent character after Yeong-hye's initial hospitalization, and her
parents and brother (never given much attention in the narrative) slowly distance themselves
from Yeong-hye as well, leaving In-hye as her sole source of support. In-hye periodically visits
her sister at Ch'ukseong Psychiatric Hospital in hopes that she will eventually recover from what
is claimed to be intense mania. Towards the end of the novel, however, Yeong-hye claims that
she is no longer animal, but rather, a plant. She becomes non-verbal, and stops eating all
together. After a final attempt by the nurses at Ch'ukseong to force-feed her, In-hye, witnessing
the scene unfold, bites the arm of a nurse and both are sent to another hospital by ambulance.
The novel closes with and ambiguous scene in which In-hye gazes through the window at the
trees rush by.