Tag Archives: history

Spring Cleaning at the National Museum

Korean Art

Spring is here, and summer is just around the corner. Going with the seasonal flow, the National Museum is also ready to clean out the old and replace it with the new 2014 spring summer collection. Starting next Monday, the Fine Arts Department will renew the entire Korean paintings wing of the second floor. This renewal process will include Joseon portraits, screen paintings, genre paintings, Buddhavista(s), and calligraphies. So far, only the Buddhist paintings have been renewed just yesterday.

20140324_135907
2014.03.24 Changing Buddhist Painting diptych at the Paintings wing on second floor.

Continue reading

Tagged , , , , , ,

Life as a Peninsula, Part Two: The Case of the Missing Warlords

by John Lee

양반 사회
Warlordism, the armed consolidation of personal control over subnational territory, is prevalent in world history, particularly in times of crisis when central authority breaks down and authorities in violence rise in its stead. Such was the case of Dark Age Europe after the fall of the Roman Empire, medieval Japan during the Sengoku period, and twentieth-century China after the collapse of the Qing dynasty.

In Korea however, the last spate of widespread warlordism was during the Later Three Kingdoms, a period of disorder that befell the Silla dynasty at the end of the ninth century. One warlord, Wang Kŏn, succeeded in subjugating his rivals, and the Koryŏ dynasty (918-1392) was born. For the next one thousand years, centralized administration would grow to become the norm on the peninsula. Coups would pass and go, rebellions would rise to be crushed, but Korea would never again descend into endemic warlordism. Continue reading

Tagged , , , , , , , , ,

Shamanism in the Modern Era

SANYO DIGITAL CAMERA

A pig ready to be balanced on a pitchfork, offered to the Gods, then eaten by all

             I stand amidst a rural garden, listening to constant drumming and chanting, surrounded by close friends and strangers from distant cities.  I traveled to a small town outside of Seoul to witness a Korean shaman’s ritual, but I did not only find superstitious elders and a rural population.  Instead, at this ritual in the middle of nowhere I found CEOs, politicians, artists and scholars, all in attendance out of respect for this Korean shaman and the necessity of this ritual to their lives.  Here I saw that the Kut (the Korean traditional shamanist ritual) remains alive as an integral part of modern Korean life.

             A Mudang is a profession and lifestyle that can take 2 minutes or 2 weeks to explain, and even in my extensive time working with Korean performance I have not fully grasped it.  At its core, a Mudang is someone who becomes possessed by what they call a “ghost” or a “god,” using the Mudang’s body as a translator between the material world and what Mudang call the “spirit world.”  This results in a period where the Mudang becomes possessed by their ghost and enters what anthropologist Michael Harner calls the SSC – a shifted state of consciousness.  During this shift, the Mudang’s ghost may tell fortunes and give advice on the future, perform a Kut (which ranges from dancing on knives to the slaughtering of a pig), or simply enter a clever banter with the client, remarking on their dress or demeanor.  Continue reading

Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Life as a Peninsula, Part I: The Five Korean Wars

By John LeeSatellite_image_of_Korea_2004-01-04

The following is part of an occasional series where we will analyze the history of the Korean peninsula as a geographic space. Part One takes a look at the peninsula’s position between the Asian continent and the western Pacific and how wars have shaped Korea’s position therein.

Geography does not make its own history, but it shapes history’s contours and colors in its definitions. Belgian historian Henri Pirenne famously argued that the Mediterranean Sea had existed as a single cultural and economic unit from Roman times onward until two seismic events in the eighth century – the rise of Islam on one side of the Sea and Charlemagne’s consolidation of Christendom on the other – split the Mediterranean into two distinct civilizational zones for rest of history. Though Pirenne’s thesis has been critiqued from multiple angles, his work helped lay the roots of the Annales School of historical analysis that emphasizes long-term perspectives into oft-overlooked structures such as geographic space.

The Korean peninsula can attract a similar line of analysis. Ever since the thirteenth century, the peninsula has lain between two distinct geographic zones. On one side  Continue reading

Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , ,