Soon-won Hwang’s 『Moving Castle』 was examined from the perspective of chronotope, love of place, loss of place, and otherness. 『Moving Castle』 consists of 4 chapters and consists of the chronotope of Seong-ho - Mrs. Hong, Myeong-suk and Ji-yeon, Min-gu - Eun-hee, Park Su-byeon, and Jun-tae - Chang-ae and Ji-yeon. The narrative is confusingly mixed, revealing several characters’ journeys to find their identities in fragments. The chronotope of 『Moving Castle』 is the time and space of loss of place. It is a space for others who cannot be reborn as subjects. So, others consciously set out on a journey to ‘create a place.’ This attempt at creating a place delays the meaninglessness of our lives and the loss of subjectivity, allows us to gain awareness of human existence and ontological self, and ultimately allows the desiring subject to transcend ontology and connect with the subject without integrating the other into himself. It seeks ethical relationships with others. The characters in 『The Moving Castle』 are others who have slipped from the subject. They are beings who have slipped from subjectivity due to the circumstances and environment of the times and the wounds and traumas they have. In other words, Hwang Soonwon’s wandering others seek to express their identity through attempts to create a place for settlement. It also deals with the issue of ethics in the relationship between the subject and others. Through analysis from the perspective of chronotope, placeness, and otherness, the author sought to reveal the search for identity, the issues of human existence, and the ethical relationship between the subject and others that she sought to embody in her novel. I hope that this study will be an opportunity to go one step further than existing research and study this work from various angles.