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Korean shamanism

Korean shamanism or Mu-ism (Korean무교; Hanja巫敎; RRMu-gyo) is a religion from Korea. It is also called musok (무속; 巫俗) in Korean. Scholars of religion have classified it as a folk religion. There is no central authority in control of the religion and much diversity exists among practitioners.

A mudang performing a kut ritual in Seoul, South Korea.

The musok religion is polytheistic, promoting belief in a range of deities. Both these deities and ancestral spirits are deemed capable of interacting with living humans and causing them problems. Central to the religion are ritual specialists, the majority of them female, called mudang (무당; 巫堂) or mu (; ); in English they have sometimes been called "shamans", although the accuracy of this term is debated among anthropologists. The mudang assist paying clients in determining the cause of misfortune using divination. Mudang also perform longer rituals called kut, in which the gods and ancestral spirits are given offerings of food and drink and entertained with song and dance. These may take place in a private home or in a shrine, the kuttang, often located on a mountain. There are various sub-types of mudang, whose approach is often informed by regional tradition. The largest type are the mansin or kangsin-mu, historically dominant in northern regions, whose rituals involve them being personally possessed by deities or ancestral spirits. Another type is the sesŭp-mu of eastern and southern regions, whose rituals entail spirit mediumship but not possession.

Elements of the musok tradition may derive from prehistory. During the Joseon period, Confucian elites suppressed the mudang with taxation and legal restrictions, deeming their rites to be improper. From the late 19th century, modernisers – many of whom were Christian – characterised musok as misin (superstition) and supported its suppression. During the Japanese occupation of the early 20th century, nationalistically oriented folklorists began promoting the idea that musok represented Korea's ancient religion and a manifestation of its national culture; an idea later heavily promoted by mudang themselves. In the mid-20th century, persecution of mudang continued under the Marxist government of North Korea and through the New Community Movement in South Korea. More positive appraisal of the mudang occurred in South Korea from the late 1970s onward, especially as practitioners were associated with the minjung pro-democracy movement and came to be regarded as a source of Korean cultural identity.

Musok is primarily found in South Korea, where there are around 200,000 mudang, although practitioners are also found abroad. While Korean attitudes to religion have historically been fairly inclusive, allowing for syncretism between musok and Buddhism, the mudang have nevertheless long been marginalised. Disapproval of mudang, often regarded as charlatans, remains widespread in South Korea, especially among Christians. Musok has also influenced some Korean new religions, such as Cheondoism and Jeungsanism.

Definition edit

 
The t'aegŭk symbol, representing the cosmos, is often displayed on the exterior of kuttang, or shrine-buildings in the musok religion

The anthropologist Chongho Kim noted that providing a definition of Korean shamanism was "really problematic".[1] He characterised "Korean shamanism" as being a largely "residual" category into which all Korean religious practices that were not Buddhist, Confucian, or Christian were lumped.[1] Scholars like Kil-sŏng Ch'oe and Don Baker have conversely presented Korean shamanism as just one facet of "Korean folk religion."[2]

Korean shamanism has varyingly been labelled a vernacular religion,[3] a folk religion,[4] a popular religion,[5] and an indigenous religion.[6] It is a non-institutionalized tradition,[7] rather than being an organized religion akin to Buddhism or Christianity.[8] It has no doctrine,[9] nor any overarching hierarchy,[10] and is orally transmitted.[11] It displays considerable regional variation,[12] as well as variation according to the choices of individual practitioners.[11] Over time, the tradition has displayed both continuity and change.[13]

One of the terms commonly used to describe this religious tradition is musok ("mu folklore"), coined by the folklorist Yi Nŭnghwa.[14] This term emerged during the Japanese colonial period and was used by the Japanese Governor-General in a judgemental fashion to describe rituals he deemed primitive,[15] although it has since become popular with scholars and the Korean population.[16] The Korean studies scholar Antonetta L. Bruno employed the capitalised term Musok as a name for the religion.[17] Other terms that have been applied to it include mugyo,[18] muijŭm,[16] and mu.[16] In Korea, the term misin ("superstition") is sometimes used for this religion, but is also applied to other religious and cultural practices like geomancy.[19] While misin carries negative connotations in Korean culture, the term is sometimes used by mudang to describe what they do.[20]

English language studies of the mudang have repeatedly referred to them as "shamans" and their practices as "Korean shamanism" since the late 19th century.[21] Some Korean sources have rendered this English term as shyamŏnijŭm.[16] Having been introduced into English from the Tungusic languages at the end of the 17th century, the term "shamanism" has never received a commonly agreed definition and has been used in at least four distinct ways in the English language.[22] A common definition uses "shamanism" to describe traditions involving visionary flights to perform ritual tasks in another realm,[23] a practice not found in Korean traditional religion.[24] Many scholars avoid the term "shaman" as a cross-cultural category altogether.[25] While considering the term's applicability to Korean religion, Chongho Kim noted that its use as a blanket term was "often unhelpful",[26] while the anthropologist Liora Sarfati noted its use was "controversial" in the Korean context.[24] Suk-Jay Yim suggested that the term mu-ism was more appropriate for the Korean religion than "Korean shamanism."[27]

Prior to Christianity's arrival in the 17th and 18th centuries, Korean religion was rarely exclusivist, with many Koreans practising Buddhism, Daoism, Confucianism, and vernacular practices like musok simultaneously.[11] There has been particular syncretism between musok practice and Buddhism.[28] If asked, mudang will often identify as Buddhists,[29] and often worship Buddhist deities,[30] while some Korean Buddhist temples venerate deities traditionally associated with musok.[31] In contemporary South Korea, it remains possible for followers of most major religions (barring Christianity) to involve themselves in musok with little censure from fellow members of their religion.[11] Meanwhile, mudang based in Europe have merged the tradition with New Age elements.[32]

Terms and types of practitioners edit

A key role in musok is played by individuals whom the anthropologist Kyoim Yun called "ritual specialists who mediate between their clients and the invisible" forces of the supernatural.[33] The most common term for these specialists across Korea is mudang,[34] with Sarfati noting that this term "encompasses a variety of folk religion practitioners" across the peninsula.[35] The term mudang can apply to a man or woman.[36] Male practitioners are also commonly called paksu,[37] although in the Seoul area, male practitioners have sometimes been called sana mudang (male mudang),[36] while another term formerly used was kyŏksa.[38] Although commonly used, the term mudang carries derogatory connotations in Korean culture and thus some practitioners avoid it.[39] Other terms used in its place include musok-in,[40] and the term mu.[41] The Korean word mu is synonymous with the Chinese word wu Hanja: , which defines both male and female shamans.[42] Several modern mudang advocacy groups have adopted the term musogin, meaning "people who do mu."[43] These modern advocacy groups have also described supporters as sindo (believers, Hanja: 信徒) or musindo (believers in the ways of mu, Hanja: 巫信徒).[44]

 
A paksu, or male mudang, performing a ritual in South Korea

Mudang are often divided into two broad types: the kangsin-mu, or "god-descended" mu, and the sesŭp-mu or "hereditary" mu. The former engage in rituals in which they describe themselves as being possessed by supernatural entities; the latter's rituals involve interaction with these entities but not possession.[45] The former was historically more common in the northern and central parts of the Korean peninsula, the latter in the southern parts below the Han River.[46] The kangsin-mu tradition has since spread and by the late 20th century was dominant across South Korea,[47] with its ritual costumes and paraphernalia being widely adopted.[48] As Sarfati noted, the line between the sesŭp-mu and the kangsin-mu "is blurry",[49] while Yun commented that dividing the mudang into distinct typologies "cannot explain complex reality."[50] The sesŭp-mu are typically presented as inheriting the role in a hereditary fashion, although not all sesŭp-mu do so,[50] while some kangsin-mu continue the role of a family member, as if maintaining a hereditary tradition.[51]

Certain terms are commonly used for the mudang in particular regions.[34] In Jeolla Province, the sesŭp-mu are often referred to as tanggol.[52] On Jeju Island, the sesŭp-mu are typically called simbang;[53] this was first recorded in the 15th century, used for mudang on the Korean mainland, but by the early 19th century was exclusively being used for practitioners on Jeju.[52] The kangsin-mu are often referred to as mansin,[54] a term meaning "ten thousand gods",[55] and which is considered "less derogatory" than mudang.[56]

There are also terms sometimes used for mudang but sometimes restricted instead to other types of Korean ritual specialist. The term yeongmae, describing a spirit medium, is sometimes used to describe separate practitioners from the mudang but is also widely seen as a synonym.[57] Another term some mudang use to describe themselves is posal (bosal), originally a Korean term for a Buddhist bodhisattva,[58] and which is favored more by female than male practitioners.[59] Conversely, some mudang maintain that the term posal should be reserved for the inspirational diviners who are possessed by child spirits but who do not perform the kut rituals of the mudang.[60]

Beliefs edit

Deities and ancestral spirits edit

 
Altar of a Sansingak, "Mountain God shrine". Mountain God shrines are often controlled by Buddhist temples. This one belongs to the Jeongsu Temple [ko] of Ganghwa Island.

Musok is polytheistic.[61] Supernatural beings are called kwisin (the Korean colloquial term for "ghost"),[62] or sin (the Korean colloquial term for "god" or "deity").[44] The mudang divide these beings into two main groups, the gods and the ancestral spirits, although may use the term sin for all of them.[44] Supernatural beings are seen as volatile; if humans do well by them, they can receive good fortune, but if they offend these entities then they may suffer.[63] Devotees of these deities believe that they can engage, converse, and bargain with them.[64] Each mudang will have their own personal pantheon of deities, one that may differ from the pantheon of a mudang they trained under.[65] This individual pantheon is the chusin,[66] and a mudang may add new deities to it during their career.[66] Some of these will be considered guardian deities,[67] each referred to as a taesin.[38] These deities bestow myŏnggi upon the mudang, enabling the latter to have visions and intuition that allows them to perform their tasks.[68]

The deities are called janggunsin.[69] The pantheon of deities, which has changed over time,[70] is termed sindang,[17] with over 130 musok divinities having been identified.[70] The deities can be divided into those embodying natural or cosmological forces and those who were once human, including monarchs, officials, and generals.[70] Some derive from Daoist or Buddhist traditions and others are unique to Korean vernacular religion.[29] They are deemed capable of manifesting in various material forms, such as through paintings or statues,[71] or as inhabiting specific landscape locations, such as trees, rocks, springs, and stone piles.[72] The anthropologist Laurel Kendall suggested that the relationship that mudang had with these spirit-inhabited sites was akin to animism.[73] The gods appear in human form.[74]

The highest deities are often deemed remote and little interested in human affairs;[17] some of the more powerful deities can make demands from humans without any obligation to reciprocate.[75] Other deities are involved in everyday human concerns and prayed to accordingly.[76] Many of the deities desire food and drink, spend money, and enjoy song and dance, and thus receive these things as offerings.[77] Spirits of the dead are thought to yearn for the activities and pleasures they enjoyed in life;[78] spirits of military generals are for instance believed to like dangerous games.[79] The associations of particular deities can change over time; Hogu Pyŏlsŏng was for instance a goddess of smallpox, but after that disease's eradication in the 20th century retained associations with measles and chickenpox.[80]

Cosmological deities include Ch'ilsŏng, the spirit of the seven stars of the Big Dipper, who is regarded as a merciful Buddhist figure who cares for children.[81] Yŏngdŏng is a goddess of the wind, popular in southern areas including Jeju.[82] Mountain gods are called sansin,[83] or sometimes sansillyŏng.[84] These are typically depicted as a man with a white beard, blue gown, and accompanying tiger.[85] Spirits of military generals are sinjang,[86] and include historical figures like Ch'oeyŏng, Im Kyŏngŏp, Oh, and Chang.[70] More recent military figures have been adopted as musok deities; around Inchon, various mudang have venerated General Douglas MacArthur as a hero of the Korean War.[70] Child deities are tongja.[87]

 
Two jangseung outside a Korean village, photographed in 1903

Villages traditionally had Jangseung, timber posts representing two generals that guard the settlement from harmful spirits.[88] Historically, villages would often hold annual festivals to thank their tutelary deities. These would often be seen by local men and reflect Confucian traditions, although sometimes mudang were invited to participate.[89] In Korean society, rapid urbanisation has radically changed how people interact with their local deities.[90]

Korean vernacular beliefs include the existence of many household deities.[90] Keeping these entities happy was traditionally regarded as the role of the housewife,[90] and is achieved through offering them food and drink.[91] These informal rituals do not require the involvement of mudang, who would only be called in for special occasions.[92] There are various house spirits, one of the most prominent of which is Sŏngju, the House Lord.[73] Pollution caused by births or deaths in the household are believed to result in the House Lord leaving, meaning that he must be encouraged to return through ritual.[73] The House Lord may also require propitiation if expensive goods are brought into the home, as he expects a portion of the expenditure to be devoted to him.[93]

The ancestral spirits are called chosang.[44] Tutelary ancestors are termed tangju.[94] The ancestors who may be venerated in musok rituals are broader than the purely patrilineal figures venerated in formal Korean ancestor veneration rites, the chesa.[95] These broader ancestors may for instance include those from a woman's natal family, women who have married out of the family, or family members who have died without offspring.[95] While both the musok rites and the Confucian-derived chesa entail communication with ancestors, only the former involves direct communication with these spirits, allowing the ancestors to convey messages directly to the living.[96] Certain ancestral spirits can also form part of a mudang's personal pantheon.[97] A personal spiritual guardian is the momju (plural momjusin).[98] The momjusin of male mudang are usually deemed female; those of female mudang are typically male.[99]

Buddhist deities have also been incorporated into shamanism.[100]

Mythology edit

Korean shamanic narratives include a number of myths that discuss the origins of shamans or the shamanic religion. These include, the Princess Bari myth, the Gongsim myth, and the Chogong bon-puri myth.[101][102] Origin myths are often called ponp'uri.[103] These narratives have been extensively collected and studied by Korean scholars.[103] During a kut ritual held for the dead, an epic ballad called the Tale of Princess Pari is often recited.[104]

Princess Bari edit

The Princess Bari narrative is found in all regions except Jeju.[105] Roughly one hundred versions of the myth have been transcribed by scholars as of 2016, around half of those since 1997.[106] As of 1998, all known versions were sung only during kut rituals held for the deceased. Princess Bari is therefore a goddess closely associated with funeral rites.[107] Bari's exact role varies according to the version, sometimes failing to become a deity at all, but she is usually identified as the patron goddess of shamans, the conductor of the souls of the dead, or the goddess of the Big Dipper.[102]

 
Princess Bari holding the flower of resurrection. Painting for shamanic rituals, eighteenth century.

Despite the large number of versions, most agree upon the basic story. The first major episode shared by almost all versions is the marriage of the king and queen. The queen gives birth to six consecutive daughters who are treated luxuriously. When she is pregnant a seventh time, the queen has an auspicious dream. The royal couple takes this as a sign that she is finally bearing a son and prepares the festivities. Unfortunately, the child is a girl.[108][109] The disappointed king orders the daughter to be thrown away, dubbing her Bari, from Korean 버리- beori- "to throw away."[note 1][110] In some versions, she must be abandoned two or three times because she is protected by animals the first and second times. The girl is then rescued by a figure such as the Buddha (who regrets upon seeing her that he cannot take a woman as his disciple), a mountain god, or a stork.[111]

Once Bari has grown, one or both of her parents fall gravely ill. They learn that the disease can only be cured through medicinal water from the Western Heaven. In the majority of versions, the king and queen ask their six older daughters to go fetch the water, but all of them refuse. Desperate, the king and queen order Princess Bari to be found again. In other versions, the royal couple is told in a dream or a prophecy to find their daughter. In any case, Bari is brought to court. She agrees to go to the Western Heaven and departs, usually wearing the robes of a man.[112]

The details of Bari's quest differ according to the version.[113] In one of the oldest recorded narratives, recited by a shaman from near Seoul in the 1930s, she meets the Buddha after having gone three thousand leagues. Seeing through her disguise and remarking that she is a woman, the Buddha asks if she can truly go another three thousand leagues. When Bari responds that she will keep going even if she is to die, he gives her a silk flower, which turns a vast ocean into land for her to cross.[114] She then liberates hundreds of millions of dead souls who are imprisoned in a towering fortress of thorns and steel.[115]

When Bari finally arrives at the site of the medicinal water, she finds it defended by a supernatural guardian (of varying nature) who also knows that she is a woman, and obliges her to work for him and bear him sons. Once this is done―she may give birth to as many as twelve sons, depending on the version―she is allowed to return with the medicinal water and the flowers of resurrection. When she returns, she finds that her parents (or parent) have already died and that their funerals are being held. She interrupts the funeral procession, opens the coffin lids, and resurrects her parents with the flowers and cures them with the water.[116] In most versions, the princess then attains divinity.[117]

Additional information on Myths edit

One of the common myths in Korean Shamanism is known as the Myth of Tangun.[118] This myth refers to the belief that God would come from heaven. This would result in the earth and heaven being unified. God and human beings would be unified as well. Korean Shamanism believes that the goddess mother of earth is married to the heavenly God.[118]

Birth and the dead edit

A common belief in Korean vernacular religion is that spirits of the dead wander the human world before entering the afterlife.[119] After death, the soul must stand trial in court and pass through gates kept by the Ten Kings.[120] At this court, the dead are judged for their conduct in life.[121] The Ten Gates of Hell are regarded as places of punishment for the wicked, typified by grotesque and gory scenes.[121]

The dead are regarded as being intrinsically dangerous to the living as their touch causes affliction, regardless of whether they mean harm or not.[122] Dead family members with unfulfilled desires, such as grandparents who never saw their grandchildren, a first wife who was replaced by a second wife, and young people who died before they could marry, are all considered especially dangerous.[123] Meddlesome ghosts are thought to often enter the house on a piece of cloth, clothing, or bright object.[124]

If a person suffers a tragic or untimely death, it is believed that their soul hovers between life and death and can cause misfortune for their family; they thus need to be dealt with through ritual.[125] Terms for wandering spirits include jabkwi[126] and kaeksa,[127] and mudang are deemed best suited for dealing with them, because they can determine what they want and tell them to go away.[128]

On Jeju Island, since the late 1980s there have been public lamentations of the dead involving simbang to mark those killed in the Jeju uprising of 1948.[129]

Morality and ethics edit

Korean custom places greater emphasis on the good of the group over the wishes of the individual.[88] It has taboos and expectations, but no concept equivalent to the Christian notion of sin.[91]

Practices edit

Central to musok rituals is a reciprocal transaction between humans and supernatural entities.[130] These rituals are typically performance-focused, rather than being rooted in a prescribed liturgy,[131] and can last for up to several days.[132] Most musok rituals take place secretly and involve few participants,[133] usually only the mudang and the clients who have commissioned them.[134]

Mudang edit

 
A mudang photographed in the early years of the 20th century

The mudang are, according to their own beliefs, people who interact with the gods and the ancestors by divining their presence and will, performing small rituals to placate them and gain their favor, and oversee the kut rituals to feast and entertain them.[135] Sarfati defined them as "practitioners of spiritual mediation" between the supernatural and human worlds,[136] and noted that in mediating between worlds they are "liminal figures".[137] According to Sarfati, the mudang communicate with supernatural beings "to decrease suffering and create a more harmonious life".[138] Individual mudang can be regarded as having particular specialities.[63]

Mudang operate as free agents, rather than members of an ordained clergy.[139] For them, ritual is an economic activity,[140] often being their full-time job,[141] upon which they depend for their income.[142] Some mudang nevertheless fail to earn a living through this ritual vocation.[143] In modern South Korea, mudang have advertised their services in brochures, fliers, and newspapers,[144] and more recently via the Internet.[145] Yun observed that some "scholar-advocates" of musok took a "nostalgic view" that the mudang were "once purer than they are now," having degenerated under the impact of capitalism and modernisation into displaying a more materialistic and self-interested approach to their practice.[146]

Male mudang often wear female clothing and makeup when performing rituals, reflecting their possession of a female monjusin.[147] Female mudang may show an interest in smoking, drinking alcohol, and playing with bladed weapons, reflecting that they have a male monjusin.[99] In Korean society, there have been persistent rumours about the toleration of homosexuality within musok practitioners.[148]

Mudang have sometimes worked in groups.[149] This has been observed among simbang on Jeju,[94] as well as mansin in Seoul.[150] In the early 1990s, for example, a feminist group in Seoul sponsored several mudang to perform a kut ritual for the aggrieved souls of Korean "comfort women".[151] When an arsonist torched Seoul's historic Namdaemun Gate in 2008, several mansin performed a ritual to appease spirits angered by the act.[119]

The tradition maintains that the deities bestow myŏnggi ("divine energy") on a mudang, allowing them to perform their ritual tasks successfully.[152] In musok, divine favor must be gained through purification and supplication, prayer and pilgrimage.[68] Korean shamans also experience shinmyeong (신명 (神明); "divine light"), which is the channeling of a god, during which the shaman speaks prophetically.[153]Shinmyeong is also experienced by entire communities during the kut hold by the shaman, and is a moment of energisation which relieves from social pressure, both physical and mental.[154]

Becoming a mudang edit

 
A paksu, or male mudang

Practitioners believe that, in order to encourage a person to become a mudang, the deities will torment that individual with misfortune, illness or madness.[155] They often report fearful encounters with spirits prior to becoming mudang, for instance through dreams;[156] these dreams and visions may reveal which deities the future mudang is expected to serve.[157] This process is termed the sinŭi kamul ("the drought caused by the gods"),[158] sinbyŏng ("spirit possession sickness"),[35] or mubyŏng ("mu sickness").[159] One example of sinbyŏng was described by a famous model who became a mudang, Pak Mi-sǒn, who related how her experiences of partial paralysis and hallucinations resulted in her embracing the practice.[160]

A common motif in the biographies of mudang is the claim that they encountered divine beings or spiritual guides while wandering in a wild environment.[161] The mudang may be compelled by spirit voices or visions, or drawn by compulsion to go to a temple, shrine, or sacred mountain.[161] By recounting these stories, mudang legitimate their calling to the profession.[162] Many mudang claim that they never wanted to be one,[163] and fight against the calling.[136] Most mudang claim that they and their families resisted the calling due to its lowly status and social disapproval.[164]

Once the person has accepted the calling, they must find an established practitioner who is willing to train them.[165] They become this person's apprentice, the chagŭn mudang.[165] Apprentices are usually aged over 18, although there are examples of children becoming apprentices.[166] The apprentice of a mudang may be called their sinttal or sinddal (spirit daughter) if female,[167] or sinadul (spirit son) if male.[168] The mudang will be that novice's sineomeoni.[150] The neophyte must ultimately perform an initiation ritual to open up malmun (the "gates of speech") that will allow them to receive the words of the spirits.[169] This rite is called the naerim kut.[170] It involves the neophyte performing the appropriate chants, dances, and oracles to invoke and convey inspiration from the deities.[171] If the initiate fails to perform this correctly, with the deities failing to open their malmun, they will have to perform it again.[172] Many mudang will perform multiple naerim kut before being recognised as properly initiated practitioners.[173] Those mudang who have failed to learn how to deal with supernatural entities correctly are sometimes called ōngt'ōri by other practitioners.[174]

Among the hereditary sesŭp-mu tradition, the teachings were not always passed from mother to daughter but sometimes involved the practitioner adopting an apprentice.[175] Thus, sesŭp-mu like the Jeju simbang learn their trade by observing more experienced practitioners.[176] In early 21st-century Jeju, many simbang have been recorded as not wanting their children to follow them into the profession.[177] When mudang die, their ritual paraphernalia is sometimes burned or buried so as to sever any connection between their deities and their surviving family.[178]

Clients of the mudang edit

 
The mudang Oh Su-bok, mistress of the dodang-gut of Gyeonggi, holding a service to placate angry spirits of the dead.

Serving private clients is the core practice for most mudang, even those who have built celebrity status through their performance of staged kut.[179] In Jeju, clients are called tan'gol.[180] Clients seek solutions to their practical problems,[181] typically hoping that the mudang can ascertain the cause of misfortune they have suffered.[182] Common reasons for doing so include recurring nightmares,[183] concerns about a child getting into university,[181] financial woes,[181] business concerns,[184] or physical ailments.[185] Some clients turn to the mudang after being dissatisfied with the diagnosis or treatment administered by medical professionals.[186] In musok, it is neglecting ancestors and gods that is seen as the primary cause of human affliction.[187] The mudang uses divination and trance visions to determine the source of their client's trouble. [188]

Although both sexes are among the clients of mudang,[189] most clientele are women.[190] From his fieldwork in the 1990s, Chongho Kim found that most of the clients were "older women", particularly in their late fifties and early sixties.[191] In that same decade, Kendall noted that most clients in the area of Seoul and its environs were small entrepreneurs, such as owners of small companies, shops, and restaurants.[192] Sarfati noted that in the 21st century, many young people turned to mudang as part of a spiritual search or for counselling.[193] Clients do not generally regard themselves as being committed exclusively to musok, and may primarily visit Buddhist temples or Christian churches.[139] Many mudang themselves believe that their rituals will be pleasing to the spirits regardless of the client's personal beliefs.[138] On occasion, a busy client will not attend the kut they have sponsored.[194]

If the ritual fails to produce the desired result, the client may speculate that it was because of a bad performer, errors in the ritual, the presence of a ritually polluted attendee, or a lack of sincerity on their part.[195] If the client feels the mudang has not successfully solved their problem, they may turn to another mudang.[196] They may be disappointed or angry at this failure given their substantial financial investment;[196] in some rare cases clients have sued mudang.[196] The payment of money is often a source of mistrust between clients and mudang.[197] Concerns about money are heightened by the lack of an "institutional buffer" between the client and ritual practitioner, such as a temple or church.[198]

Altars and shrines edit

 
A 19th-century musindo painting of a sansin (mountain spirit), on display at the Brooklyn Museum; images like this often appeared on altars

Most musok rituals center around altars,[199] places for mudang to engage with supernatural beings.[199] If in a client's home, the mudang will often establish a temporary altar.[199] If at a shrine, the altar will often be a stone or an old tree.[199] The mudang will also typically have a shrine in their home in which they host various gods and ancestors.[124] These shrines are called sinbang, harabŏjiŭibang, or pŏptang,[200] and each may have idiosyncratic elements.[201]

This home shrine may include paintings of deities, called musindo,[202] taenghwa,[202] musokhwa,[203] or sinhwa.[203] These paintings are particularly important in the musok traditions of Seoul and of the northwest provinces Hwanghae and P'yǒngan;[200] they were traditionally not found in parts of the south.[204] When included they are usually considered the most important objects present,[205] and hang above the altar.[200] They are regarded as seats for the deities, literally manifesting the latter's presence rather than just visually depicting them,[206] an idea similar to those found across much of Asia, as in Buddhism and Hinduism.[207] As well as being invited to inhabit a painting, a deity may also be petitioned to depart it; they are sometimes believed to leave of their own accord, for instance if they abandon a mudang who keeps the image.[208]

Musindo paintings range from being crude to more sophisticated.[209] Traditionally they use colors associated with the five directions (오방색; obang saek): red, blue/green, yellow, white, and black.[64] Painters who produce musindo are traditionally expected to adhere to standards of purity while producing these artworks,[210] bathing beforehand and refraining from eating fish or meat.[211] Since the 1970s, musindo have commonly been produced in commercial workshops,[212] although a small number of traditional artists remain in South Korea.[213] After a mudang's death, their musindo were often ritually de-animated and then burned during the 20th century.[214] Some musindo have been donated to museums; certain musok practitioners believe that the deity leaves the image if that occurs.[215]

Also present may be sinsang, or deity statues made of wood, plastic, clay, straw, or metal.[216] Deities may instead be represented by a white piece of paper, the kŭlbal or kŭlmun, onto which the entity's name is written in black or red ink.[48] In musok, the deity may also be seated in physical objects, including stones, clothing, coins, dolls, or knives,[48] and which may be concealed from view, for instance being wrapped within cloth or inside a chest.[71] Some mudang also include images of Buddhist deities on their shrines.[217]

 
Shrine in the kuttang at Ansan, featuring statues of various deities.

Also present will typically be candlesticks, offering bowls, and incense pots.[201] The home altar will often be dominated with bright, primary colors, in contrast to the muted earth tones which traditionally predominated in Korean daily life.[93] The mudang's altar will also often be a place to store or display their ritual paraphernalia, such as costumes.[218] It may also include toys or dolls to amuse the child gods.[219]

Mudang typically bow when entering a shrine-room.[200] Offerings to the deities will be placed on this home shrine.[220] Some offerings, such as cooked rice, fruit, and water, may be changed daily; other offerings, such as sweets, cigarettes, and liquor, may be replaced more infrequently.[221] Mudang hold that they provide offerings to these deities in thanks to the work that these entities have brought them; a large assortment of offerings can thus give the impression that the mudang is financially successful.[201] Worshipping the deities daily sustains their ongoing favor.[210] Clients of the mudang may place offerings at this shrine as well as the mudang themselves.[222]

Deities are often believed to be present in all houses.[223] Historical accounts often reference the presence of earthen jars (tok, hangari, tanji) filled with grain, or smaller baskets or pouches, as offerings to household deities and ancestors.[73] This practice was declining in South Korea by the 1960s and 1970s.[223] By the latter decades of the 20th century, cardboard boxes had become common receptacles for these household offerings.[73]

Kuttang and pugundang edit

 
The Kuksadang shrine is located on Inwang Mountain, Seoul; Kendall noted that many mudang "regard the Kuksadang as Korea's premier kuttang."[224]

Shrines at which the musok rituals are performed are called kuttang or kut dang (굿당) and are typically located on mountains in South Korea.[225] Shrines dedicated to significant tutelary spirits are known as tang or pugundang,[226] and were historically often the foci for local cults, such as those devoted to apotheosised heroes.[227]Kuttang will often be identified on the exterior by the presence of a t'aegŭk symbol, a circular swirl of red, blue, and yellow that symbolizes the cosmos.[228] The main ritual room is called the kut bang,[229] and often contains an offering table on which offerings are placed.[229] Mudang often rent a kuttang to perform their rituals, especially if they do not have the room for such rites in their home.[230]

Some kuttang are regarded as being located at especially auspicious places, at an area below a mountain, the myŏngdang, where positive spiritual energy is thought to congregate.[231] Practitioners often also believe that deities encourage followers to choose specific locales for the placement of kuttang via dreams.[232] Kuttang sometimes move over time.[233] The Kuksadang, which Kendall described as "Seoul's most venerable kuttang",[226] for instance was originally on South Mountain, before being displaced by a Shinto shrine during the Japanese occupation of Korea and then moved onto Inwangsan, a mountain to the north of the city.[233] The growing urbanisation of South Korea since the late 20th century has meant that many are now surrounded by other buildings, sometimes including other kuttang.[234] The increasingly cramped nature of Korean urban living may have encouraged the increasing popularity of kuttang in isolated locations like mountains.[226] On Jeju Island, various villages have more than one shrine;[235] new village shrines have been established on Jeju during the early 21st century.[236]

Kuttang are often run as a business.[237] It is unclear exactly when they began renting themselves out as spaces for mudang to use, although it has been argued that it was in the later years of the Joseon period.[238] The kuttang will have a shrine keeper,[239] who may be a mudang themselves.[174] Other staff based there may include musicians called chaebi,[239] kitchen staff to prepare food for kut rituals,[230] and a maid called the kongyangju who is an intended mudang but who has not yet undergone their initiation ritual.[239] As well as spaces for ritual, these kuttang can also provide places for networking, where mudang can witness the rituals of other practitioners and observe different regional styles.[234]

Kut rites edit

 
Diorama of a kut inside the National Museum of Korea, Seoul

The central ritual of the mudang is called kut.[240] These are large-scale rites,[241] characterised by rhythmic movements, songs, oracles and prayers.[242] They are the only rituals in traditional Korean religion believed to give supernatural entities the ability to speak directly to humans,[243] and are meant to create welfare, promoting commitment between supernatural beings and humankind.[244] There is regional diversity in the styles of kut,[245] although some mudang mix these different styles,[246] with each kut displaying features unique to its particular circumstances.[247]

A kut is sponsored for a specific purpose.[248] A kut may be arranged due to an illness, domestic quarrel, or financial loss.[188] The purpose of a kut is to get the supernatural beings to communicate, expressing what it is that they want and why they are angry.[26] In the 21st century, it has become increasingly common to sponsor a kut to mark a new financial venture, such as the opening of a mall or an office building.[249] As well as being performed for clients, the mudang will sometimes perform these rituals for their own personal reasons;[250] in the 1990s, for instance, the prominent mudang Kim Kŭm-hwa performed a kut for Korean reunification.[251]

The fee charged varies between mudang and the circumstances of the rite.[252] However, a kut is usually very expensive for the client of a mudang;[253] based on his fieldwork in 1990s, Chongho Kim noted that a kut in Seoul typically cost between 2 and 5 million won, whereas in the rural area of Soy it cost between 300,000 and 2.5 million won.[254] The precise fee may be negotiated between the mu and their client, sometimes involving haggling.[255] This will usually be agreed at a pre-kut consultation.[256] As well as paying for the mudang's time, the fee also covers the wages of any assistants and the costs of material used in the rite;[86] it may also reflect the years of training they have undertaken to be able to perform these rituals.[257]

 
A kut held on Jeju Island in 2006.

The kut is usually held in private, and few have a larger audience than the direct participants,[258] although there are instances where those paying for a kut will invite neighbors to observe.[259] These rituals are typically regarded as unsuitable for children to attend.[260] Often it will take place outdoors and at night, in an isolated rural location,[261] at a kuttang shrine rented for the occasion,[262] or in a private home,[263] either that of the mudang,[264] or that of their client.[265] Setting up the kut may involve not only the mudang but also their apprentices, assistants, musicians, butchers, and cooks.[266] Preparing and decorating the space is deemed a meaningful part of the ritual process,[74] with those setting it up often concerned so as not to offend the spirits.[267]

Colorful paintings of the gods will often be brought into the space where the kut is to be performed;[268] this is not part of the kut performed by Jeju simbang.[180] God paintings are usually paper, although in modern contexts are sometimes polyester, ensuring that they are resistant to rain and tearing. Other practitioners regard the use of polyester images as a corruption of tradition.[269] These images are then often hung on a metal frame.[74] In Taejŏn City and Ch'ungch'ŏng province, a traditional practice involves decorating the ritual space with handmade mulberry paper cut into patterns.[48] Various ritual items may be included in the kut ritual, including swords, the samjichang, a drum, drum stick, and the spirit stick.[270] The samjichang is a three-pronged spear.[271] The chukwonmun is a prayer card used in the kut onto which information like the name of the client may be written.[272] The chukwonmun may then be attached to a drum.[273]

Offerings at the kut edit

 
A kut performed in South Korea in 2007, showing the offering of meat to the spirits

At kut, food is offered to the spirits.[274] This will often include fish, rice, rice cakes, eggs, sweets, biscuits, fruit, and meat.[275] Some of this food will be cooked, some will be offered raw.[250] To provide meat, animal sacrifice occurs at most kut, although is rare in televisual, cinematic, and museum depictions of these rites.[276] A cow or pig killed for the purpose may be butchered in the shrine room;[268] the carcass may be impaled on the trident; if it fails to balance, then this is seen as evidence that the deities do not accept the offering.[277] When the ritual is intended to invoke Buddhist spirits, the food offerings may be vegetarian;[278] offering these entities meat would offend them.[279] Food offerings may also be set out at the side for wandering spirits who are attracted by the ritual, an act designed to avoid mishaps they could cause.[280]

Offered alongside the food will often be alcoholic drinks, typically soju,[281] as well as non-food items like incense, cloth, money (both real and imitation), and paper flowers.[282] The color of the flowers may indicate to whom they are offered; pink for the spirits of military generals, white for Buddhist deities, and multi-colored for ancestral spirits.[283] The material used for the kut will often be bought in a manmulsang shop, which specialises in traditional religious paraphernalia.[284] In modern South Korea, the ritual paraphernalia used is often of poor quality because it is intended to be burnt following the ceremony.[285]

These may be placed on offering tables; one table will be the halabeoji sang, devoted to the musok gods, while the other table will be the jasang sang, devoted to ancestral spirits.[286] The mudang will often perform divination to determine if the offerings have been accepted by the supernatural beings.[287] It is considered important for the person giving these offerings to do so with sincerity and devotion,[288] with the mudang undertaking a form of divination called "weighing the sincerity" (chŏngsŏng kŭllyang) to determine if this has been the case.[289]

During the ritual, attendees may be expected to give additional offerings of money to the mudang, often while they are possessed, intended as thanks both to them and to the spirits.[290] These offerings, given in addition to the ritual fee, are called pyŏlbi or kajŏn.[291] Any real money presented as offerings to the deities will be taken by the mudang.[292] Much of the food assembled for the kut will then be distributed and consumed by the attendees at the end of the ritual,[293] having been charged by auspiciousness by its involvement in the rite.[201] Attendees may distribute some of this food to non-attendees once they get home;[294] they may also set some aside to feed any wandering spirits that might have followed them from the kut.[201] In some kut, especially those held at kut dang shrines, food will also be left to decay.[201]

Performance at the kut edit

 
A janggu drum, on display at the National Museum of Korea in Seoul

The ritual begins with the mudang inviting supernatural entities to the altar, after which they set out to entertain them.[295] Music will often be involved in the kut.[268] Musical instruments typically involved in kut include cymbals, hourglass-shaped drums called changgu, and a gong.[296] Also sometimes featured is a pipe, the p'iri.[297] The kut will often begin with drumming.[261] The mudang will often dance to the beat of the drums, often swirling in circles, something believed to facilitate the possession trance.[298] They may hold short sticks to which white paper streamers are attached; this device is intended to help channel the spirits into the mudang's body.[280]

The language used by a mudang during their rite is called mudang sori ("mudang's sounds"),[299] and is often deliberately archaic.[279] The songs or chants employed are called muga,[300] with each practitioner having their own personal repertoire, largely inherited through oral tradition.[301] As well as traditional folk songs, some mudang have sung pop songs to entertain the spirits.[302] Incantations and ritual words for communicating with the spirit are called chukeon.[303] The mudang will often recite mythological stories during the ritual, something deemed to contribute to its efficacy.[304] These may be recited in full at a longer ritual or in condensed form for a shorter one.[304] There may be breaks during the kut, for instance giving time for the participants to eat.[305]

The mudang may also carry a fan and brass bells;[297] Sarfati commented that these bells were "a central symbol of musok",[306] and their purpose is to attract the attention of the spirits.[307]

The costumes worn for these rituals are called sinbok.[308] These colorful outfits resemble those documented from the 19th and early 20th centuries,[309] and may involve a hanbok.[297] The mansin may distinguish themselves from their assistants by having their hair in the Tchokchin mŏri style.[267] For the kut, the mudang will dress in the gods' costume,[131] with different deities associated with different items of clothing.[308] They may change outfit over the course of the kut to reflect the different entities possessing them.[310] This is not a practice that the sesup mu engage in.[180]

 
Sticks with white paper streamers are used by mansin to channel the spirits into their body

Also used in many kut are chaktu blades, objects symbolizing the bravery of the possessing warrior spirits.[311] The mudang may stab themselves in the chest with the knives,[312] run the blade along their tongue,[311] or press it to their face and hands.[313] Riding knives is termed jakdugeori and involves the mudang walking barefoot on the upturned blade of the knife, sometimes while speaking in gongsu, or possessed speech.[314] Practitioners claim that it is the spirits that prevent the mudang from being cut by the blade,[315] and the ability to undertake such dangerous acts without harm is regarded as evidence for the efficacy of the rite.[316] Some practitioners acknowledge instances in which they have been cut by the blades.[317] Jakdugeori has become an expected part of staged or cinematic kut.[318]

The possession phase takes place at the climax of the ritual.[319] In some kut traditions, the mudang will stand upon an earthen jar while doing so.[320] The term sin-naerim (descending of the spirits) describes possession of the mansin, intended in a manner that is largely controlled.[321] Possessed speech is called kongsu;[322] words from the possessing entity will then be spoken to the assembled persons by the mudang.[323] Over the course of a kut, a mansin may be possessed by a succession of different supernatural entities.[324] On Jeju, the simbang will provide a voice for the spirits.[325] Yun noted that the simbang's "so-called medium speech" typically lacked the "dramatic intensity" of the messages conveyed by the kangsin-mu.[326] The entities possessing the mudang will typically dispense advice to the ritual's sponsor and to other attendees.[327] Supernatural beings will often relate that if a kut had been performed earlier, misfortune would not have befallen the person sponsoring the kut.[328]

The final phase of the kut entails sending off the spirits who have been summoned, often by burning name tags, the josang ot ("clothes for ancestors") or cloth, straw shoes, and imitation money.[329] Towards the end of the kut, wandering spirits that may have gathered are expelled,[330] talismans may be distributed to attendees,[331] and finally the mudang will remove their ceremonial clothing.[302]

Styles of kut edit

The kkonmaji kut or flower-greeting kut is an annual rite held by a mudang to entertain and feed their gods, ancestors, and clients.[332] The sin kut are performed in gratitude to the deities and ancestors for granting a mu their spiritual power and thus a livelihood. They are regarded as returning to these supernatural beings a portion of what the mu has earned.[333] The sin kut can sometimes last 10 days.[334] The byong kut is a ritual for expelling bad spirits, sometimes from a human. This sometimes involves the spirit forcing it into a bottle.[335]

The mich'in kut is performed for a person who is mentally afflicted and often deemed to be possessed by one or more spirits.[336] Exorcisms will often involve throwing scraps of food, sometimes at the afflicted person.[337] The possessing spirit is offered food to encourage it to leave.[338]

Historically, the kut may have had entertainment value when there were few other outlets.[339] Since the latter decades of the 20th century, kut performed primarily for entertainment purposes rather than for religious reasons are referred to as kut gongyeon.[340] Some practitioners who perform both draw a clear distinction between them,[340] although many mudang still regard staged kut as genuine interactions with spirits.[13] Performed in museums or at city festivals, these kut often take place on raised stages surrounded by a seated audience,[341] typically attracting journalists, scholars, and photographers.[342] Staged kut are often dedicated to general causes such as national prosperity;[343] sometimes the food placed as an offering is fake.[344] They often involve folklorists or other scholars who explain the ritual to the audience,[345] while the participants will often be dressed in a common uniform, something not found in private kut.[308] Mudang may see these staged rituals as an opportunity to attract potential new clients,[346] uploading videos of them performing such rites to social media and YouTube.[347]

Kut gongyeon are often performed for their artistic value.[297] By 2009, South Korea's government recognised ten regional kut styles as parts of the country's intangible cultural heritage, and that year one of these traditions — the Yǒngdŭng kut performed at Ch'ilmǒri Shrine on Jeju — was added to UNESCO's Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.[348]

Purification edit

Purity of both the body and the mind is a state that is required for taking part in rituals.[349] Purification is considered necessary for an efficacious communion between living people and ancestral forms.[349] Before any kut is performed, the altar is always purified by fire and water, as part of the first gori of the ritual itself.[349] The colour white, extensively used in rituals, is regarded as a symbol of purity.[349] The purification of the body is performed by burning white paper.[349]

Mountains, landscape, and pilgrimage edit

In the musok religion, rocks, springs, and sŏn'ang trees may be regarded as being spiritually potent.[350] The latter trees may be marked out by having strips of cloth or paper attached to them.[351]

 
Gardens of the Samseonggung, a shrine for the worship of Hwanin, Hwanung and Dangun.

In stories surrounding the mudang, mountains are often represented as both places of sacred presence and also places associated with the ultimate origin of the mudang tradition.[352] Each prominent mountain is deemed to have a specific mountain spirit who is sovereign upon it.[73] The levels of spiritual power at a mountain are influenced not just by its associated deities but also the ki energy (the equivalent of the Chinese qi) that is present there.[73] This ki is believed to channel through maek ("veins") through the mountain landscape; these can be disrupted by roads or other construction.[73] Thus, the potency of these mountains is thought to decline amid growing urbanisation and tourist access.[73] In Korea, this traditional geomancy is called p'ungsu, and is akin to the Chinese fengshui.[353]

Pilgrimages to mountain shrines of particular deities have long been part of Korean folk religion.[91] Some mudang prepare for these pilgrimages by abstaining from eating meat, fish, or eggs, and bathe before leaving.[354] On arrival at the shrine, the pilgrim will bow and provide an offering.[91] Mountain landscapes regularly attract mudang who regard these as places that concentrate powerful deities and which are conducive to receiving visions. They are also seen as places to replenish their "bright energy" (myŏnggi).[355] Mudang will make offerings not only at the mountains but also at springs and guardian trees en route.[356] Incorrectly performing the pilgrimage may upset the sansin and bring about this spirit's retribution.[357]

In historical periods, the mudang's mountain pilgrimages were typically rare events although improved transportation meant that by the 1990s these had become far more regular occurrences in South Korea.[234] The most sacred mountain for the mudang is Mount Paektu, located on North Korea's northern border with China.[358] This is believed to channel ki to every other mountain in the peninsula.[359] According to legend, it is also the birthplace of Tan'gun, the national ancestor and first mudang.[359] Since the 1990s, mudang from South Korea have travelled to China to make pilgrimages to this mountain.[360]

Talismans and divination edit

An important component of the mudang's role is to produce talismans called pujŏk (bujeok) which are presented as providing the bearer with good fortune.[361] These pujŏk are often based on Hanja, Korean versions of Chinese ideograms.[362] These may be distributed to attendees at the end of a rite.[331] Clients will often affix these to the internal walls of their home.[363]

Divination is termed jeom.[364] One form of divination, sometimes performed during other rituals, involves a person picking one of a selection of rolled up silk flags. The color of the selected flag is then interpreted as bearing meaning for that individual.[365] Green and yellow flags are for instance often seek as indicating bad fortune,[365] while red is regarded as being auspicious.[366] The mugŏri style of divination involves casting rice and coins onto a tray.[367]

In Korean vernacular religion, there are also ritual specialists who perform divinations and produce amulets but who do not engage in kut rituals like the mudang.[368]

History edit

Detailed accounts of mudang rituals prior to the modern period are rare,[369] and the fact that the tradition is orally transmitted means it is difficult to trace historical processes.[11]

Prehistory edit

Korean shamanism goes back to prehistoric times, pre-dating the introduction of Buddhism and Confucianism, and the influence of Taoism, in Korea.[370] Vestiges of temples dedicated to gods and spirits have been found on tops and slopes of many mountains in the peninsula.[370]

Shamanism can be traced back to 1,000 BC.[371] The religion has been part of the culture of the Korean Peninsula since then. "Historically, Korean Shamanism (Musok) was an orally transmitted tradition that was mastered mainly by illiterate low-ranking women within the neo-Confucian hierarchy."[372] However, several records and texts have documented the origin of Korean Shamanism. One of these texts is Wei Shi which traces Shamanism to the third century.[373] Chinese dynastic histories mention the importance of designated shamans among early religious practices in Japan but not Korea.[374] The Korean studies scholar Richard D. McBride thus asserts that non-shamans were able to practice "under their own authority".[374] Evidently, the history of Korean Shamanism remains a mystery. However, foreign religions, including Christianity, Buddhism, Confucianism and Taoism have influenced the development of Korean Shamanism.[375]

The development of Korean Shamanism can be categorized into different groups. The first category involves simple transformation. In this transformation, the influence of the practices and beliefs of other religions on Korean Shamanism was superficial.[376] The second category of transmission was syncretistic. This category involves Shamanism being incorporated into the practices and beliefs of other cultures, including Confucianism, Christianity, Taoism, and Buddhism.[376] These religions had different levels of influence on Korean Shamanism. The third category involves the formation of new religions through the mixing of beliefs and practices of Shamanism with those of other dominant religions.[376]

Although many Koreans converted to Buddhism when it was introduced to the peninsula in the 4th century, and adopted as the state religion in Silla and Goryeo, it remained a minor religion compared to Korean shamanism.[377]

The term mu is first recorded in the 12th-century Yisanggugjip.[378] It also appears in the Samguk Sagi from that century.[379] The use of images of the musok deities, hanging on the wall, is first recorded from the 13th century.[380]

Joseon Korea and Japanese Occupation edit

The Goryeo kingdom was replaced by the Joseon dynasty, which saw an increase in governmental persecution of the mudang,[381] who were seen as having a low status.[382] Confucianism was the dominant ideology in Joseon Korea, contributing to these suppressions;[383] later historians argued that this was connected to the elite's desire to gain more power by challenging rivals to their Confucian system.[384] Confucians accepted the existence of the spirits invoked in the mudang's rites,[385] but argued that there were better ways of dealing with these supernatural beings.[386] They regarded the musok rituals as improper,[386] criticising the presence of both sexes together in environments where alcohol was being consumed.[387] Korea's Neo-Confucian scholars used the derogatory term ŭmsa for non-Confucian ceremonies, of which they considered the mudang rituals among the lowest.[381]

 
A mudang performs a kut in a painting titled Munyeo sinmu (무녀신무, 巫女神舞), made by Shin Yunbok in 1805.

In the Joseon dynasty, mudang belonged to one of eight outcast groups that were expelled from the capital city.[388] The Gyeonggukdaejeon law book prescribed 100 lashes in public for anyone found to be supporting them.[383] This persecution could prove deadly; in an extreme case, a mudang was beheaded in 1398.[389] In an oft-cited incident, Jeju governor Yi Hyǒngsang initiated a purge of simbang on the island in 1702, destroying 129 shrines.[390] Taxes were levied on the mudang's rituals, both to discourage the practice but also to raise revenues for the government; these taxes remained in place until the 1895 Kabo reforms.[391] At the same time as the government persecuted the mudang, they also turned to them in emergencies like epidemics, droughts, and famines.[389]

By the late 19th century, many Korean intellectuals eager for modernisation came to regard musok as superstition that should be eradicated;[392] they increasingly referred to it with the term misin ("superstition").[393] These ideas were endorsed in The Independent, Korea's first vernacular newspaper.[394] Many of these intellectuals were Christian, thus regarding the mudang's spirits as evil demons.[395] In 1896, police launched a crackdown by arresting mudang, destroying shrines, and burning paraphernalia.[396]

The Japanese Empire invaded Korea in 1910.[397] During the Japanese occupation, the occupiers tried to incorporate musok within, or replace it with, State Shinto.[398][399] The Japanese colonial Governor-General of Chōsen presented the mudang as evidence for Korean cultural backwardness, an approach intended to legitimate Japanese imperial rule.[400] Japanese efforts to suppress the tradition included the Mind Cultivation Movement launched in 1936.[401] Korean elites largely supported these suppressions for a variety of reasons, one of which was to demonstrate Korean cultural advancement to the Japanese occupying Korea.[402]

It was in this colonial context that scholars developed the idea that the mudang were continuing an ancient Korean religion and thus represented the spiritual and cultural repository of the Korean people.[403] Influenced by the Western use of the term "shamanism" as a cross-cultural category, some Korean scholars speculated that the mudang tradition descended from Siberian traditions.[180] The Japanese scholar Torii Ryūzō proposed the mudang as a remnant of a primordial Shinto, with both stemming from Siberian "shamanism."[404] These ideas were built on by nationalist Korean scholars Ch'oe Nam-sŏn and Yi Nŭnghwa in the 1920s.[404] Cho'e reversed Torii's framework by emphasising the primacy of ancient Korean over Japanese tradition as the transmitter of Siberian religion,[405] while Yi promoted the mudang tradition as the residue of what he called sin'gyo ("divine teachings"), meaning a primordial Korean religion that lost its purity through the arrival of Confucianism and Buddhism.[405] At the time, Korean elites remained wary about this new positive reassessment.[406]

Korean War and Division edit

 
Kim Kŭm-hwa became one of the world's most famous mudang from the 1980s onward

The situation for Musok worsened after the division of Korea and the establishment of a northern Socialist government and a southern pro-Christian government.[407] The Korean War and subsequent urbanisation of Korean society resulted in many Koreans moving around the peninsula, impacting the distinct regional traditions of the mudang.[408] Many mudang from Hwanghae (in North Korea) resettled in Inchon (in South Korea), strongly influencing musok there, for example.[213] This migration meant that by the early 21st century, kangsin-mu were increasingly dominant in areas like Jeju where sesŭp-mu historically predominated, generating rivalry between the two traditions.[50]

In North Korea, most formal religious activity was suppressed.[409] Mudang and their families were targeted as members of the "hostile class" and were considered to have bad sǒngbun, "tainted blood".[410] In South Korea, Christianity spread rapidly from the 1960s onward, becoming the country's dominant religion by the start of the 21st century.[411] South Korean leader Syngman Rhee launched the Sin Saenghwal Undong ("New Life Movement") which destroyed many village shrines.[412] This policy continued as the Saemaul Undong ("New Community Movement") of his successor, Park Chung Hee, which led to a surge in the police suppression of mudang during the 1970s.[413] Such outright persecution ended after Park's assassination in 1979.[412]

The popularization of folklore studies in the 1970s resulted in the notion of musok as Korea's ancient tradition gaining acceptance among growing numbers of educated South Koreans.[414] In 1962, South Korea had introduced a Cultural Properties Protection Law that recognised performing arts as intangible cultural heritage; some folklorists used this to help defend the mudang.[414] In the latter part of the 20th century, the mudang rituals were increasingly revived as a form of theatrical performance linked to cultural conservation and tourism.[415] From the 1980s onward, South Korea's government designated certain mudang as Human Cultural Treasures.[416] One of the best-known examples was Kim Geum-hwa (Kim Kŭm-hwa), who from the 1980s performed for foreign anthropologists, toured Western countries, and appeared in documentaries.[417] Reflecting the view of musok as an important part of Korea's cultural heritage, a kut was depicted on a South Korean postage stamp while musok elements were included at the Seoul 1988 Olympic Arts Festival and the 1988 inauguration of President Roh Tae-woo.[418] Paintings of musok deities became increasingly collectable in the 1980s and 1990s.[419]

The mudang were often regarded favorably within South Korea's minjung (Popular Culture Movement) pro-democracy campaign from the 1970s; several mudang were active in the movement and became emblematic of its struggle.[420] Advocacy groups were also formed to advance the cause of the mu,[421] keen to present the tradition as lying at the heart of Korean culture,[421] while the 1980s also saw mudang begin to write books about themselves.[422] Mudang also adapted to new technologies; from the 1990s they increasingly used the Internet to advertise their services,[423] while portrayals of mudang became widespread on South Korean television in the 2010s.[424] This increasing cultural visibility improved the mudang's social image.[425]

Since the early 19th century, a number of movements of revitalization or innovation of traditional Korean shamanism arose. They are characterized by an organized structure, a codified doctrine, and a body of scriptural texts. They may be grouped into three major families: the family of Daejongism or Dangunism, the Donghak-originated movements (including Cheondoism and Suunism), and the family of Jeungsanism (including Jeung San Do, Daesun Jinrihoe, the now-extinct Bocheonism, and many other sects).[426]

Demographics edit

 
A shrine to a sansin mountain spirit inside the Buddhist temple at Saseongam in South Korea

Mudang have conventionally belonged to the lowest social class.[427] Chongho Kim noted that most mudang he encountered in the 1990s had a "very poor educational background",[428] and were also typically financially poor.[429] Most mudang are female,[430] with the religion being dominated by women.[431] This may connect to origin myths that present musok as first developing among priestesses.[432] Chongho Kim cautioned that the notion of musok being a "women's religion" ignored the antagonistic attitude that most Korean women had towards it.[433] Approximately a fifth of mudang are male paksu,[321] although the latter are proportionately over-represented in 21st-century media representations.[434] There is regional variation in these gender differences; on Jeju Island, there were more male than female simbang prior to the 1950s, and proportions of male practitioners remain higher there than on the Korean mainland.[435]

Determining the number of mudang is difficult.[24] In the early 21st century, Sarfati noted that the number of mudang was estimated at being over 200,000,[24] a number that she observed was "not diminishing".[436] This stability is not evenly distributed among different types of mudang; in 2019, Yung noted that the hereditary sesŭp-mu, including the Jeju simbang, were "in steep decline".[437] There is also regional variation in the presence of mudang; by the 21st century, mudang were more common in Seoul than in rural parts of South Korea,[438] while Yun observed that the practice was "undeniably more prominent" on Jeju than on the mainland.[439] Musok is not recorded in the South Korean census because the government does not regard adherence to it as being akin to identifying as a Christian or a Buddhist.[440] A late 20th-century survey by the Korean Gallup Research Institute indicated that 38 percent of the adult population of South Korea had used a mudang.[441] In North Korea, according to demographic analyses by Religious Intelligence, approximately 16 percent of the population practises "traditional ethnic" religion.[442]

Since at least the 20th century, mudang have travelled abroad to perform rituals;[150] many for instance travel to Japan to serve clients in Japan's Korean minority.[443] There are also mudang living in Europe,[32] and a small number of non-Koreans have become mudang; a 2007 documentary covered the story of a German mudang.[119] Kendall noted the existence of one mudang living outside Korea who was promoting their teachings through New Age-style workshops.[444]

Reception edit

 
A diorama of a mudang worshipping at a shrine at the Lotte World Folk Museum in Seoul

Musok has been suppressed throughout Korean history under a succession of dominant ideologies including Confucianism, Japanese colonialism, and Christianity.[445] At the start of the 21st century, the mudang remained widely stigmatized in South Korean society, facing widespread prejudice.[446] In 2021, Sarfati observed that while the religion was "still stigmatized," it was experiencing "growing acceptance" in South Korea.[447]

The religion's critics often regard mudang as swindlers,[448] people who manipulate the gullible.[449] Critics regularly focus their critique on the large sums of money that the mudang charge,[450] and maintain that the expenses required for its rituals are wasteful.[451] Critics have also accused mudang of disrupting the civil order with their rituals.[450] Kendall noted that there was a "generally adversarial relationship" between mudang and Protestants in South Korea,[135] the latter regarding musok as "Devil worship".[452] Mainline Protestant theologians have sometimes blamed musok for predisposing Koreans to Pentecostalism and the idea that prayer can generate financial reward.[453] Christians have sometimes harassed mudang at their places of work or during their ceremonies,[454] something which some mudang regard as religious discrimination.[455]

Mudang began appearing in South Korean film in the 1960s.[456] Early portrayals in the 1960s and 1970s generally showed them as harmful, frightening, and anti-modern figures, as in Ssal (1963), Munyŏdo (1972) and Iŏdo (1977).[457] From the mid-2000s, films increasingly portrayed them as members of a living tradition situated in modern urban environments, as in Ch'ŏngham Posal (2009) and Paksu Kŏndal (2013).[458] The 2000s also saw several successful documentaries about mudang appear in Korean cinemas,[175] as well as increasing appearances of mudang on Korean television.[459] Korean artists who have cited musok rituals as an influence on their work include Nam June Paik, who recreated an exorcism kut for several performances from the late 1970s.[460] Musok has also been presented in museums, although often with emphasis placed on its folkloric and aesthetic value rather than its role as a religious practice.[461] South Korea's government often embrace kut as a traditional performing artform, but marginalise its religious function.[462]

Musok has influenced some Korean new religions, such as Cheondoism and Jeungsanism, and some Christian churches in Korea make use of practices rooted in musok.[463]

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Or 바리데기 Bari-degi "thrown-away baby"

References edit

Citations edit

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  368. ^ Kendall 2009, pp. 123–124.
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  370. ^ a b Lee 1981, p. 21.
  371. ^ Chačatrjan 2015, p. 8.
  372. ^ Sarfati, Liora (2016). "Shifting Agencies through New Media: New Social Statuses for Female South Korean Shamans". Journal of Korean Studies. 21 (1): 179–211. doi:10.1353/jks.2016.0009. ISSN 2158-1665. S2CID 148559163.
  373. ^ Chačatrjan 2015, p. 9.
  374. ^ a b McBride 2006, p. 28.
  375. ^ Chačatrjan 2015, p. 10.
  376. ^ a b c Chačatrjan 2015, p. 59.
  377. ^ Pyong Gap Min (2010). Preserving Ethnicity Through Religion in America: Korean Protestants and Indian Hindus Across Generations. New York University Press. ISBN 978-0-8147-9615-3. p. 44.
  378. ^ Kim 2018, p. 191.
  379. ^ Lee 1981, p. 2.
  380. ^ Kendall, Yang & Yoon 2015, p. 17.
  381. ^ a b Yun 2019, p. 32.
  382. ^ Seth, Michael J. (2020). Korea: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 33.
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  391. ^ Yun 2019, p. 44.
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  393. ^ Yun 2019, pp. 51–53.
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  397. ^ Yun 2019, p. 53.
  398. ^ Sorensen 1995, pp. 11–22.
  399. ^ Choi 2006, p. 17.
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  403. ^ Kendall 2009, pp. 17–18; Yun 2019, pp. 54, 57.
  404. ^ a b Yun 2019, p. 57.
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  406. ^ Yun 2019, p. 60.
  407. ^ Sorensen 1995, pp. 24–27.
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  409. ^ Baker 2008, p. 13.
  410. ^ Demick, Barbara (2009). Nothing to Envy: Ordinary Lives in North Korea. Spiegel & Grau. ISBN 978-0-385-52390-5.
  411. ^ Kim 2018, p. 157.
  412. ^ a b Yun 2019, p. 65.
  413. ^ Kendall 2009, p. 10; Kim 2018, pp. 86–87; Yun 2019, p. 65; Sarfati 2021, p. 5.
  414. ^ a b Kendall 2009, p. 19.
  415. ^ Kim 2018, p. 209.
  416. ^ Kendall 2009, p. xxii.
  417. ^ Kendall 2009, p. 20; Kim 2018, pp. 195–196; Sarfati 2021, pp. 84, 86.
  418. ^ Kendall 2009, p. 20; Yun 2019, p. 70.
  419. ^ Kendall, Yang & Yoon 2015, p. 124.
  420. ^ Kendall 2009, pp. 21–22; Sarfati 2021, pp. 5–6.
  421. ^ a b Kendall 2009, pp. 15–16.
  422. ^ Kendall 2009, p. 109.
  423. ^ Sarfati 2021, pp. 18, 177.
  424. ^ Sarfati 2021, p. 2.
  425. ^ Sarfati 2021, p. 6.
  426. ^ Lee 2010s, passim.
  427. ^ Sarfati 2021, p. 119.
  428. ^ Kim 2018, pp. 51–52.
  429. ^ Kim 2018, p. 208.
  430. ^ Lee 1981, p. 12; Kendall 1988, p. 6; Kendall 2009, p. xx; Kim 2018, p. 34; Yun 2019, p. 22; Sarfati 2021, p. 19.
  431. ^ Kim 2018, p. 106.
  432. ^ Lee 1981, p. 12.
  433. ^ Kim 2018, p. 151.
  434. ^ Sarfati 2021, pp. 18–19.
  435. ^ Yun 2019, p. 22.
  436. ^ Sarfati 2021, p. 3.
  437. ^ Yun 2019, p. 146.
  438. ^ Sarfati 2021, p. 14.
  439. ^ Yun 2019, p. 145.
  440. ^ Baker 2008, p. 4.
  441. ^ Kim 2018, p. 7.
  442. ^ . Religious Intelligence UK. Archived from the original on 13 October 2007.
  443. ^ Yun 2019, pp. 23, 81; Sarfati 2021, p. 168.
  444. ^ Kendall 2009, p. 207.
  445. ^ Kim 2018, p. 160.
  446. ^ Kim 2018, p. xiii; Yun 2019, p. 80.
  447. ^ Sarfati 2021, p. 4.
  448. ^ Kim 2018, pp. 166, 167; Yun 2019, pp. 4, 162.
  449. ^ Yun 2019, p. 132.
  450. ^ a b Sarfati 2021, p. 166.
  451. ^ Yun 2019, p. 66.
  452. ^ Kendall 2009, p. 6.
  453. ^ Kendall 2009, p. 131.
  454. ^ Kendall 2009, p. 24; Kim 2018, pp. 157–158.
  455. ^ Kendall 2009, p. 24.
  456. ^ Sarfati 2021, p. 59.
  457. ^ Sarfati 2021, pp. 64–65.
  458. ^ Sarfati 2021, pp. 68–70.
  459. ^ Sarfati 2021, p. 131.
  460. ^ Kang 2019, p. 112.
  461. ^ Sarfati 2021, p. 96-97.
  462. ^ Yun 2019, p. 165.
  463. ^ Kim, Andrew E. (1 July 2000). "Korean Religious Culture and Its Affinity to Christianity: The Rise of Protestant Christianity in South Korea". Sociology of Religion. 61 (2): 117–133. doi:10.2307/3712281. JSTOR 3712281.

Sources edit

  • Baker, Don (2008). Korean Spirituality. Dimensions of Asian Spirituality. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press. ISBN 978-0-8248-3233-9.
  • Bruno, Antonetta L. (2013). "The Posal between the Mudang and Buddhist: In-between and Bypassing". Journal of Korean Religions. 4 (2): 175–196.
  • Bruno, Antonetta L. (2016). "Translatability of Knowledge in Ethnography: The Case of Korean Shamanic Texts". Rivista degli studi orientali. 89 (1): 121–139. JSTOR 45111754.
  • Chačatrjan, Arevik (2015). "An Investigation on the History and Structure of Korean Shamanism". International Journal of Korean Humanities and Social Sciences. 59.
  • Ch'oe, Kil-sŏng (1989). "The Symbolic Meaning of Shamanic Ritual in Korean Folk Life". Journal of Ritual Studies. 3 (2): 217–233. JSTOR 44368938.
  • Choi, Joon-sik (2006). Folk-Religion: The Customs in Korea. Seoul: Ewha Womans University Press. ISBN 978-89-7300-628-1.
  • Hutton, Ronald (2001). Shamans: Siberian Spirituality and the Western Imagination. London and New York: Hambledon and London. ISBN 978-1-85295-324-9.
  • Kang, Mi-Jung (2019). "The Sound of Shamans in the Works of Nam June Paik and Early Korean Video Artists". RE:SOUND: 8th International Conference on Media Art, Science, and Technology: 110–115. doi:10.14236/ewic/RESOUND19.18.
  • Kendall, Laurel (1988). The Life and Hard Times of a Korean Shaman: Of Tales and the Telling of Tales. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 978-0-8248-1145-7.
  • Kendall, Laurel (2009). Shamans, Nostalgias and the IMF: South Korean Popular Religion in Motion. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 978-0-8248-3398-5.
  • Kendall, Laurel (2021). "Gods and Things: Is "Animism" an Operable Concept in Korea?". Religions. 12 (283): 283. doi:10.3390/rel12040283.
  • Kendall, Laurel; Yang, Jongsung; Yoon, Yul Soo (2015). God Pictures in Korean Contexts: The Ownership and Meaning of Shaman Paintings. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press. doi:10.21313/hawaii/9780824847647.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-8248-6833-8. OCLC 986613847.
  • Kim, Chongho (2018) [2003]. Korean Shamanism: The Cultural Paradox. London and New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-138-71051-1.
  • Kwon, Heonik (2009). "Healing the Wounds of War: New Ancestral Shrines in Korea" (PDF). The Asia-Pacific Journal. 7 (24 #4): 1–17.
  • Lee, Jung Young (1981). Korean Shamanistic Rituals. Religion and Society. The Hague: Mouton. ISBN 978-90-279-3378-2.
  • McBride, Richard D. (July 2006). "What is the Ancient Korean Religion?". Acta Koreana. 9 (2): 1–30.
  • Sarfati, Lora (2021). Contemporary Korean Shamanism: From Ritual to Digital. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-05717-4.
  • Sorensen, Clark W. (July 1995). The Political Message of Folklore in South Korea's Student Demonstrations of the Eighties: An Approach to the Analysis of Political Theater. Fifty Years of Korean Independence. Seoul: Korean Political Science Association.
  • Yun, Kyoim (2019). The Shaman's Wages: Trading in Ritual on Cheju Island. Korean Studies of the Henry M. Jackson School of International Studies. Seattle: University of Washington Press. ISBN 978-0-295-74595-4.

Further reading edit

English language sources edit

  • Kim, Tae-kon (1998). Korean Shamanism—Muism. Jimoondang Publishing Company. ISBN 978-89-88095-09-6.
  • Yunesŭk'o Han'guk Wiwŏnhoe (1985). "Korea Journal". Korean National Commission for UNESCO. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Keith Howard (Hrsg.): Korean Shamanism. Revival, survivals and change. The Royal Asiatic Society, Korea Branch, Seoul Press, Seoul 1998.
  • Dong Kyu Kim: Looping effects between images and realities: understanding the plurality of Korean shamanism. The University of British Columbia, 2012.
  • Laurel Kendall: Shamans, housewives and other restless spirits. Woman in Korean ritual life (= Studies of the East Asien Institute.). University of Hawaii Press, Honolulu 1985.
  • Kwang-Ok Kim: Rituals of resistance. The manipulation of shamanism in contemporary Korea. In: Charles F. Keyes; Laurel Kendall; Helen Hardacre (Hrsg.): Asian visions of authority. Religion and the modern states of East and Southeast Asia. University of Hawaii Press, Honolulu 1994, S. 195–219.
  • Hogarth, Hyun-key Kim (1998). Kut: Happyness Through Reciprocity. Bibliotheca shamanistica. Vol. 7. Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó. ISBN 978-963-05-7545-4. ISSN 1218-988X.
  • Daniel Kister: Korean shamanist ritual. Symbols and dramas of transformation. Akadémiai Kiadó, Budapest 1997.
  • Dirk Schlottmann: . Online Publication: Institut of Cyber Society. Kyung Hee Cyber University, Seoul 2014.
  • Dirk Schlottmann Spirit Possession in Korean Shaman rituals of the Hwanghaedo-Tradition.In: Journal for the Study of Religious Experiences. Vol.4 No.2. The Religious Experience Research Centre (RERC) at the University of Wales Trinity Saint David, Wales 2018.
  • Dirk Schlottmann Dealing with Uncertainty: “Hell Joseon” and the Korean Shaman rituals for happiness and against misfortune. In: Shaman – Journal of the International Society for Academic Research on Shamanism. Vol. 27. no 1 & 2, p. 65–95. Budapest: Molnar & Kelemen Oriental Publishers 2019.

Korean language sources edit

  • 홍태한 (Hong Tae-han) (2002). Han'guk seosa muga yeon'gu 한국 서사무가 연구 [Studies on Korean Shamanic Narratives]. Seoul: Minsogwon. ISBN 978-89-5638-053-7. Anthology of prior papers.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  • —————————— (2016). Han'guk seosa muga-ui yuhyeong-byeol jonjae yangsang-gwa yeonhaeng wolli 한국 서사무가의 유형별 존재양상과 연행원리 [Forms per type and principles of performances in Korean shamanic narratives]. Seoul: Minsogwon. ISBN 978-89-285-0881-5. Anthology of prior papers.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  • 현용준 (Hyun Yong-jun); 현승환 (Hyun Seung-hwan) (1996). Jeju-do muga 제주도 무가 [Shamanic hymns of Jeju Island]. Han'guk gojeon munhak jeonjip. Research Institute of Korean Studies, Korea University.
  • 강소전 (Kang So-jeon) (2012). Jeju-do simbang-ui mengdu yeon'gu: Giwon, jeonseung, uirye-reul jungsim-euro 제주도 심방의 멩두 연구—기원,전승,의례를 중심으로- [Study on the mengdu of Jeju shamans: Origins, transfer, ritual] (PhD). Cheju National University.
  • 강정식 (Kang Jeong-sik) (2015). Jeju Gut Ihae-ui Giljabi 제주굿 이해의 길잡이 [A Primer to Understanding the Jeju Gut]. Jeju-hak Chongseo. Minsogwon. ISBN 978-89-285-0815-0. Retrieved July 11, 2020.
  • Kim, Hae-Kyung Serena (2005). Sciamanesimo e Chiesa in Corea: per un processo di evangelizzazione inculturata (in Italian). Gregorian Biblical BookShop. ISBN 978-88-7839-025-6.
  • 김태곤 (1996). 한국의 무속. Daewonsa. ISBN 978-89-5653-907-2.
  • Lee, Chi-ran (2010s). (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 April 2014.
  • 서대석 (Seo Daeseok) (2001). Han'guk sinhwa-ui yeon'gu 한국 신화의 연구 [Studies on Korean Mythology]. Seoul: Jibmundang. ISBN 978-89-303-0820-5. Retrieved June 23, 2020. Anthology of Seo's papers from the 1980s and 1990s.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  • 서대석 (Seo Daeseok); 박경신 (Park Gyeong-sin) (1996). Seosa muga il 서사무가 1 [Narrative shaman hymns, Volume I]. Han'guk gojeon munhak jeonjip. Research Institute of Korean Studies, Korea University.
  • 신연우 (Shin Yeon-woo) (2017). Jeju-do seosa muga Chogong bon-puri-ui sinhwa-seong-gwa munhak-seong 제주도 서사무가 <초공본풀이>의 신화성과 문학성 [The Mythological and Literary Nature of the Jeju Shamanic Narrative Chogong bon-puri]. Seoul: Minsogwon. ISBN 978-89-285-1036-8.

korean, shamanism, korean, 무교, hanja, 巫敎, religion, from, korea, also, called, musok, 무속, 巫俗, korean, scholars, religion, have, classified, folk, religion, there, central, authority, control, religion, much, diversity, exists, among, practitioners, mudang, per. Korean shamanism or Mu ism Korean 무교 Hanja 巫敎 RR Mu gyo is a religion from Korea It is also called musok 무속 巫俗 in Korean Scholars of religion have classified it as a folk religion There is no central authority in control of the religion and much diversity exists among practitioners A mudang performing a kut ritual in Seoul South Korea The musok religion is polytheistic promoting belief in a range of deities Both these deities and ancestral spirits are deemed capable of interacting with living humans and causing them problems Central to the religion are ritual specialists the majority of them female called mudang 무당 巫堂 or mu 무 巫 in English they have sometimes been called shamans although the accuracy of this term is debated among anthropologists The mudang assist paying clients in determining the cause of misfortune using divination Mudang also perform longer rituals called kut in which the gods and ancestral spirits are given offerings of food and drink and entertained with song and dance These may take place in a private home or in a shrine the kuttang often located on a mountain There are various sub types of mudang whose approach is often informed by regional tradition The largest type are the mansin or kangsin mu historically dominant in northern regions whose rituals involve them being personally possessed by deities or ancestral spirits Another type is the sesŭp mu of eastern and southern regions whose rituals entail spirit mediumship but not possession Elements of the musok tradition may derive from prehistory During the Joseon period Confucian elites suppressed the mudang with taxation and legal restrictions deeming their rites to be improper From the late 19th century modernisers many of whom were Christian characterised musok as misin superstition and supported its suppression During the Japanese occupation of the early 20th century nationalistically oriented folklorists began promoting the idea that musok represented Korea s ancient religion and a manifestation of its national culture an idea later heavily promoted by mudang themselves In the mid 20th century persecution of mudang continued under the Marxist government of North Korea and through the New Community Movement in South Korea More positive appraisal of the mudang occurred in South Korea from the late 1970s onward especially as practitioners were associated with the minjung pro democracy movement and came to be regarded as a source of Korean cultural identity Musok is primarily found in South Korea where there are around 200 000 mudang although practitioners are also found abroad While Korean attitudes to religion have historically been fairly inclusive allowing for syncretism between musok and Buddhism the mudang have nevertheless long been marginalised Disapproval of mudang often regarded as charlatans remains widespread in South Korea especially among Christians Musok has also influenced some Korean new religions such as Cheondoism and Jeungsanism Contents 1 Definition 1 1 Terms and types of practitioners 2 Beliefs 2 1 Deities and ancestral spirits 2 2 Mythology 2 2 1 Princess Bari 2 2 2 Additional information on Myths 2 3 Birth and the dead 2 4 Morality and ethics 3 Practices 3 1 Mudang 3 1 1 Becoming a mudang 3 1 2 Clients of the mudang 3 2 Altars and shrines 3 2 1 Kuttang and pugundang 3 3 Kut rites 3 3 1 Offerings at the kut 3 3 2 Performance at the kut 3 3 3 Styles of kut 3 4 Purification 3 5 Mountains landscape and pilgrimage 3 6 Talismans and divination 4 History 4 1 Prehistory 4 2 Joseon Korea and Japanese Occupation 4 3 Korean War and Division 5 Demographics 6 Reception 7 See also 8 Footnotes 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 Sources 10 Further reading 10 1 English language sources 10 2 Korean language sourcesDefinition edit nbsp The t aegŭk symbol representing the cosmos is often displayed on the exterior of kuttang or shrine buildings in the musok religionThe anthropologist Chongho Kim noted that providing a definition of Korean shamanism was really problematic 1 He characterised Korean shamanism as being a largely residual category into which all Korean religious practices that were not Buddhist Confucian or Christian were lumped 1 Scholars like Kil sŏng Ch oe and Don Baker have conversely presented Korean shamanism as just one facet of Korean folk religion 2 Korean shamanism has varyingly been labelled a vernacular religion 3 a folk religion 4 a popular religion 5 and an indigenous religion 6 It is a non institutionalized tradition 7 rather than being an organized religion akin to Buddhism or Christianity 8 It has no doctrine 9 nor any overarching hierarchy 10 and is orally transmitted 11 It displays considerable regional variation 12 as well as variation according to the choices of individual practitioners 11 Over time the tradition has displayed both continuity and change 13 One of the terms commonly used to describe this religious tradition is musok mu folklore coined by the folklorist Yi Nŭnghwa 14 This term emerged during the Japanese colonial period and was used by the Japanese Governor General in a judgemental fashion to describe rituals he deemed primitive 15 although it has since become popular with scholars and the Korean population 16 The Korean studies scholar Antonetta L Bruno employed the capitalised term Musok as a name for the religion 17 Other terms that have been applied to it include mugyo 18 muijŭm 16 and mu 16 In Korea the term misin superstition is sometimes used for this religion but is also applied to other religious and cultural practices like geomancy 19 While misin carries negative connotations in Korean culture the term is sometimes used by mudang to describe what they do 20 English language studies of the mudang have repeatedly referred to them as shamans and their practices as Korean shamanism since the late 19th century 21 Some Korean sources have rendered this English term as shyamŏnijŭm 16 Having been introduced into English from the Tungusic languages at the end of the 17th century the term shamanism has never received a commonly agreed definition and has been used in at least four distinct ways in the English language 22 A common definition uses shamanism to describe traditions involving visionary flights to perform ritual tasks in another realm 23 a practice not found in Korean traditional religion 24 Many scholars avoid the term shaman as a cross cultural category altogether 25 While considering the term s applicability to Korean religion Chongho Kim noted that its use as a blanket term was often unhelpful 26 while the anthropologist Liora Sarfati noted its use was controversial in the Korean context 24 Suk Jay Yim suggested that the term mu ism was more appropriate for the Korean religion than Korean shamanism 27 Prior to Christianity s arrival in the 17th and 18th centuries Korean religion was rarely exclusivist with many Koreans practising Buddhism Daoism Confucianism and vernacular practices like musok simultaneously 11 There has been particular syncretism between musok practice and Buddhism 28 If asked mudang will often identify as Buddhists 29 and often worship Buddhist deities 30 while some Korean Buddhist temples venerate deities traditionally associated with musok 31 In contemporary South Korea it remains possible for followers of most major religions barring Christianity to involve themselves in musok with little censure from fellow members of their religion 11 Meanwhile mudang based in Europe have merged the tradition with New Age elements 32 Terms and types of practitioners edit A key role in musok is played by individuals whom the anthropologist Kyoim Yun called ritual specialists who mediate between their clients and the invisible forces of the supernatural 33 The most common term for these specialists across Korea is mudang 34 with Sarfati noting that this term encompasses a variety of folk religion practitioners across the peninsula 35 The term mudang can apply to a man or woman 36 Male practitioners are also commonly called paksu 37 although in the Seoul area male practitioners have sometimes been called sana mudang male mudang 36 while another term formerly used was kyŏksa 38 Although commonly used the term mudang carries derogatory connotations in Korean culture and thus some practitioners avoid it 39 Other terms used in its place include musok in 40 and the term mu 41 The Korean word mu is synonymous with the Chinese word wu Hanja 巫 which defines both male and female shamans 42 Several modern mudang advocacy groups have adopted the term musogin meaning people who do mu 43 These modern advocacy groups have also described supporters as sindo believers Hanja 信徒 or musindo believers in the ways of mu Hanja 巫信徒 44 nbsp A paksu or male mudang performing a ritual in South KoreaMudang are often divided into two broad types the kangsin mu or god descended mu and the sesŭp mu or hereditary mu The former engage in rituals in which they describe themselves as being possessed by supernatural entities the latter s rituals involve interaction with these entities but not possession 45 The former was historically more common in the northern and central parts of the Korean peninsula the latter in the southern parts below the Han River 46 The kangsin mu tradition has since spread and by the late 20th century was dominant across South Korea 47 with its ritual costumes and paraphernalia being widely adopted 48 As Sarfati noted the line between the sesŭp mu and the kangsin mu is blurry 49 while Yun commented that dividing the mudang into distinct typologies cannot explain complex reality 50 The sesŭp mu are typically presented as inheriting the role in a hereditary fashion although not all sesŭp mu do so 50 while some kangsin mu continue the role of a family member as if maintaining a hereditary tradition 51 Certain terms are commonly used for the mudang in particular regions 34 In Jeolla Province the sesŭp mu are often referred to as tanggol 52 On Jeju Island the sesŭp mu are typically called simbang 53 this was first recorded in the 15th century used for mudang on the Korean mainland but by the early 19th century was exclusively being used for practitioners on Jeju 52 The kangsin mu are often referred to as mansin 54 a term meaning ten thousand gods 55 and which is considered less derogatory than mudang 56 There are also terms sometimes used for mudang but sometimes restricted instead to other types of Korean ritual specialist The term yeongmae describing a spirit medium is sometimes used to describe separate practitioners from the mudang but is also widely seen as a synonym 57 Another term some mudang use to describe themselves is posal bosal originally a Korean term for a Buddhist bodhisattva 58 and which is favored more by female than male practitioners 59 Conversely some mudang maintain that the term posal should be reserved for the inspirational diviners who are possessed by child spirits but who do not perform the kut rituals of the mudang 60 Beliefs editDeities and ancestral spirits edit nbsp Altar of a Sansingak Mountain God shrine Mountain God shrines are often controlled by Buddhist temples This one belongs to the Jeongsu Temple ko of Ganghwa Island Musok is polytheistic 61 Supernatural beings are called kwisin the Korean colloquial term for ghost 62 or sin the Korean colloquial term for god or deity 44 The mudang divide these beings into two main groups the gods and the ancestral spirits although may use the term sin for all of them 44 Supernatural beings are seen as volatile if humans do well by them they can receive good fortune but if they offend these entities then they may suffer 63 Devotees of these deities believe that they can engage converse and bargain with them 64 Each mudang will have their own personal pantheon of deities one that may differ from the pantheon of a mudang they trained under 65 This individual pantheon is the chusin 66 and a mudang may add new deities to it during their career 66 Some of these will be considered guardian deities 67 each referred to as a taesin 38 These deities bestow myŏnggi upon the mudang enabling the latter to have visions and intuition that allows them to perform their tasks 68 The deities are called janggunsin 69 The pantheon of deities which has changed over time 70 is termed sindang 17 with over 130 musok divinities having been identified 70 The deities can be divided into those embodying natural or cosmological forces and those who were once human including monarchs officials and generals 70 Some derive from Daoist or Buddhist traditions and others are unique to Korean vernacular religion 29 They are deemed capable of manifesting in various material forms such as through paintings or statues 71 or as inhabiting specific landscape locations such as trees rocks springs and stone piles 72 The anthropologist Laurel Kendall suggested that the relationship that mudang had with these spirit inhabited sites was akin to animism 73 The gods appear in human form 74 The highest deities are often deemed remote and little interested in human affairs 17 some of the more powerful deities can make demands from humans without any obligation to reciprocate 75 Other deities are involved in everyday human concerns and prayed to accordingly 76 Many of the deities desire food and drink spend money and enjoy song and dance and thus receive these things as offerings 77 Spirits of the dead are thought to yearn for the activities and pleasures they enjoyed in life 78 spirits of military generals are for instance believed to like dangerous games 79 The associations of particular deities can change over time Hogu Pyŏlsŏng was for instance a goddess of smallpox but after that disease s eradication in the 20th century retained associations with measles and chickenpox 80 Cosmological deities include Ch ilsŏng the spirit of the seven stars of the Big Dipper who is regarded as a merciful Buddhist figure who cares for children 81 Yŏngdŏng is a goddess of the wind popular in southern areas including Jeju 82 Mountain gods are called sansin 83 or sometimes sansillyŏng 84 These are typically depicted as a man with a white beard blue gown and accompanying tiger 85 Spirits of military generals are sinjang 86 and include historical figures like Ch oeyŏng Im Kyŏngŏp Oh and Chang 70 More recent military figures have been adopted as musok deities around Inchon various mudang have venerated General Douglas MacArthur as a hero of the Korean War 70 Child deities are tongja 87 nbsp Two jangseung outside a Korean village photographed in 1903Villages traditionally had Jangseung timber posts representing two generals that guard the settlement from harmful spirits 88 Historically villages would often hold annual festivals to thank their tutelary deities These would often be seen by local men and reflect Confucian traditions although sometimes mudang were invited to participate 89 In Korean society rapid urbanisation has radically changed how people interact with their local deities 90 Korean vernacular beliefs include the existence of many household deities 90 Keeping these entities happy was traditionally regarded as the role of the housewife 90 and is achieved through offering them food and drink 91 These informal rituals do not require the involvement of mudang who would only be called in for special occasions 92 There are various house spirits one of the most prominent of which is Sŏngju the House Lord 73 Pollution caused by births or deaths in the household are believed to result in the House Lord leaving meaning that he must be encouraged to return through ritual 73 The House Lord may also require propitiation if expensive goods are brought into the home as he expects a portion of the expenditure to be devoted to him 93 The ancestral spirits are called chosang 44 Tutelary ancestors are termed tangju 94 The ancestors who may be venerated in musok rituals are broader than the purely patrilineal figures venerated in formal Korean ancestor veneration rites the chesa 95 These broader ancestors may for instance include those from a woman s natal family women who have married out of the family or family members who have died without offspring 95 While both the musok rites and the Confucian derived chesa entail communication with ancestors only the former involves direct communication with these spirits allowing the ancestors to convey messages directly to the living 96 Certain ancestral spirits can also form part of a mudang s personal pantheon 97 A personal spiritual guardian is the momju plural momjusin 98 The momjusin of male mudang are usually deemed female those of female mudang are typically male 99 Buddhist deities have also been incorporated into shamanism 100 Mythology edit See also Chogong bon puri Korean shamanic narratives include a number of myths that discuss the origins of shamans or the shamanic religion These include the Princess Bari myth the Gongsim myth and the Chogong bon puri myth 101 102 Origin myths are often called ponp uri 103 These narratives have been extensively collected and studied by Korean scholars 103 During a kut ritual held for the dead an epic ballad called the Tale of Princess Pari is often recited 104 Princess Bari edit The Princess Bari narrative is found in all regions except Jeju 105 Roughly one hundred versions of the myth have been transcribed by scholars as of 2016 around half of those since 1997 106 As of 1998 all known versions were sung only during kut rituals held for the deceased Princess Bari is therefore a goddess closely associated with funeral rites 107 Bari s exact role varies according to the version sometimes failing to become a deity at all but she is usually identified as the patron goddess of shamans the conductor of the souls of the dead or the goddess of the Big Dipper 102 nbsp Princess Bari holding the flower of resurrection Painting for shamanic rituals eighteenth century Despite the large number of versions most agree upon the basic story The first major episode shared by almost all versions is the marriage of the king and queen The queen gives birth to six consecutive daughters who are treated luxuriously When she is pregnant a seventh time the queen has an auspicious dream The royal couple takes this as a sign that she is finally bearing a son and prepares the festivities Unfortunately the child is a girl 108 109 The disappointed king orders the daughter to be thrown away dubbing her Bari from Korean 버리 beori to throw away note 1 110 In some versions she must be abandoned two or three times because she is protected by animals the first and second times The girl is then rescued by a figure such as the Buddha who regrets upon seeing her that he cannot take a woman as his disciple a mountain god or a stork 111 Once Bari has grown one or both of her parents fall gravely ill They learn that the disease can only be cured through medicinal water from the Western Heaven In the majority of versions the king and queen ask their six older daughters to go fetch the water but all of them refuse Desperate the king and queen order Princess Bari to be found again In other versions the royal couple is told in a dream or a prophecy to find their daughter In any case Bari is brought to court She agrees to go to the Western Heaven and departs usually wearing the robes of a man 112 The details of Bari s quest differ according to the version 113 In one of the oldest recorded narratives recited by a shaman from near Seoul in the 1930s she meets the Buddha after having gone three thousand leagues Seeing through her disguise and remarking that she is a woman the Buddha asks if she can truly go another three thousand leagues When Bari responds that she will keep going even if she is to die he gives her a silk flower which turns a vast ocean into land for her to cross 114 She then liberates hundreds of millions of dead souls who are imprisoned in a towering fortress of thorns and steel 115 When Bari finally arrives at the site of the medicinal water she finds it defended by a supernatural guardian of varying nature who also knows that she is a woman and obliges her to work for him and bear him sons Once this is done she may give birth to as many as twelve sons depending on the version she is allowed to return with the medicinal water and the flowers of resurrection When she returns she finds that her parents or parent have already died and that their funerals are being held She interrupts the funeral procession opens the coffin lids and resurrects her parents with the flowers and cures them with the water 116 In most versions the princess then attains divinity 117 Additional information on Myths edit One of the common myths in Korean Shamanism is known as the Myth of Tangun 118 This myth refers to the belief that God would come from heaven This would result in the earth and heaven being unified God and human beings would be unified as well Korean Shamanism believes that the goddess mother of earth is married to the heavenly God 118 Birth and the dead edit A common belief in Korean vernacular religion is that spirits of the dead wander the human world before entering the afterlife 119 After death the soul must stand trial in court and pass through gates kept by the Ten Kings 120 At this court the dead are judged for their conduct in life 121 The Ten Gates of Hell are regarded as places of punishment for the wicked typified by grotesque and gory scenes 121 The dead are regarded as being intrinsically dangerous to the living as their touch causes affliction regardless of whether they mean harm or not 122 Dead family members with unfulfilled desires such as grandparents who never saw their grandchildren a first wife who was replaced by a second wife and young people who died before they could marry are all considered especially dangerous 123 Meddlesome ghosts are thought to often enter the house on a piece of cloth clothing or bright object 124 If a person suffers a tragic or untimely death it is believed that their soul hovers between life and death and can cause misfortune for their family they thus need to be dealt with through ritual 125 Terms for wandering spirits include jabkwi 126 and kaeksa 127 and mudang are deemed best suited for dealing with them because they can determine what they want and tell them to go away 128 On Jeju Island since the late 1980s there have been public lamentations of the dead involving simbang to mark those killed in the Jeju uprising of 1948 129 Morality and ethics edit Korean custom places greater emphasis on the good of the group over the wishes of the individual 88 It has taboos and expectations but no concept equivalent to the Christian notion of sin 91 Practices editCentral to musok rituals is a reciprocal transaction between humans and supernatural entities 130 These rituals are typically performance focused rather than being rooted in a prescribed liturgy 131 and can last for up to several days 132 Most musok rituals take place secretly and involve few participants 133 usually only the mudang and the clients who have commissioned them 134 Mudang edit Main article Shinbyeong nbsp A mudang photographed in the early years of the 20th centuryThe mudang are according to their own beliefs people who interact with the gods and the ancestors by divining their presence and will performing small rituals to placate them and gain their favor and oversee the kut rituals to feast and entertain them 135 Sarfati defined them as practitioners of spiritual mediation between the supernatural and human worlds 136 and noted that in mediating between worlds they are liminal figures 137 According to Sarfati the mudang communicate with supernatural beings to decrease suffering and create a more harmonious life 138 Individual mudang can be regarded as having particular specialities 63 Mudang operate as free agents rather than members of an ordained clergy 139 For them ritual is an economic activity 140 often being their full time job 141 upon which they depend for their income 142 Some mudang nevertheless fail to earn a living through this ritual vocation 143 In modern South Korea mudang have advertised their services in brochures fliers and newspapers 144 and more recently via the Internet 145 Yun observed that some scholar advocates of musok took a nostalgic view that the mudang were once purer than they are now having degenerated under the impact of capitalism and modernisation into displaying a more materialistic and self interested approach to their practice 146 Male mudang often wear female clothing and makeup when performing rituals reflecting their possession of a female monjusin 147 Female mudang may show an interest in smoking drinking alcohol and playing with bladed weapons reflecting that they have a male monjusin 99 In Korean society there have been persistent rumours about the toleration of homosexuality within musok practitioners 148 Mudang have sometimes worked in groups 149 This has been observed among simbang on Jeju 94 as well as mansin in Seoul 150 In the early 1990s for example a feminist group in Seoul sponsored several mudang to perform a kut ritual for the aggrieved souls of Korean comfort women 151 When an arsonist torched Seoul s historic Namdaemun Gate in 2008 several mansin performed a ritual to appease spirits angered by the act 119 The tradition maintains that the deities bestow myŏnggi divine energy on a mudang allowing them to perform their ritual tasks successfully 152 In musok divine favor must be gained through purification and supplication prayer and pilgrimage 68 Korean shamans also experience shinmyeong 신명 神明 divine light which is the channeling of a god during which the shaman speaks prophetically 153 Shinmyeong is also experienced by entire communities during the kut hold by the shaman and is a moment of energisation which relieves from social pressure both physical and mental 154 Becoming a mudang edit nbsp A paksu or male mudangPractitioners believe that in order to encourage a person to become a mudang the deities will torment that individual with misfortune illness or madness 155 They often report fearful encounters with spirits prior to becoming mudang for instance through dreams 156 these dreams and visions may reveal which deities the future mudang is expected to serve 157 This process is termed the sinŭi kamul the drought caused by the gods 158 sinbyŏng spirit possession sickness 35 or mubyŏng mu sickness 159 One example of sinbyŏng was described by a famous model who became a mudang Pak Mi sǒn who related how her experiences of partial paralysis and hallucinations resulted in her embracing the practice 160 A common motif in the biographies of mudang is the claim that they encountered divine beings or spiritual guides while wandering in a wild environment 161 The mudang may be compelled by spirit voices or visions or drawn by compulsion to go to a temple shrine or sacred mountain 161 By recounting these stories mudang legitimate their calling to the profession 162 Many mudang claim that they never wanted to be one 163 and fight against the calling 136 Most mudang claim that they and their families resisted the calling due to its lowly status and social disapproval 164 Once the person has accepted the calling they must find an established practitioner who is willing to train them 165 They become this person s apprentice the chagŭn mudang 165 Apprentices are usually aged over 18 although there are examples of children becoming apprentices 166 The apprentice of a mudang may be called their sinttal or sinddal spirit daughter if female 167 or sinadul spirit son if male 168 The mudang will be that novice s sineomeoni 150 The neophyte must ultimately perform an initiation ritual to open up malmun the gates of speech that will allow them to receive the words of the spirits 169 This rite is called the naerim kut 170 It involves the neophyte performing the appropriate chants dances and oracles to invoke and convey inspiration from the deities 171 If the initiate fails to perform this correctly with the deities failing to open their malmun they will have to perform it again 172 Many mudang will perform multiple naerim kut before being recognised as properly initiated practitioners 173 Those mudang who have failed to learn how to deal with supernatural entities correctly are sometimes called ōngt ōri by other practitioners 174 Among the hereditary sesŭp mu tradition the teachings were not always passed from mother to daughter but sometimes involved the practitioner adopting an apprentice 175 Thus sesŭp mu like the Jeju simbang learn their trade by observing more experienced practitioners 176 In early 21st century Jeju many simbang have been recorded as not wanting their children to follow them into the profession 177 When mudang die their ritual paraphernalia is sometimes burned or buried so as to sever any connection between their deities and their surviving family 178 Clients of the mudang edit nbsp The mudang Oh Su bok mistress of the dodang gut of Gyeonggi holding a service to placate angry spirits of the dead Serving private clients is the core practice for most mudang even those who have built celebrity status through their performance of staged kut 179 In Jeju clients are called tan gol 180 Clients seek solutions to their practical problems 181 typically hoping that the mudang can ascertain the cause of misfortune they have suffered 182 Common reasons for doing so include recurring nightmares 183 concerns about a child getting into university 181 financial woes 181 business concerns 184 or physical ailments 185 Some clients turn to the mudang after being dissatisfied with the diagnosis or treatment administered by medical professionals 186 In musok it is neglecting ancestors and gods that is seen as the primary cause of human affliction 187 The mudang uses divination and trance visions to determine the source of their client s trouble 188 Although both sexes are among the clients of mudang 189 most clientele are women 190 From his fieldwork in the 1990s Chongho Kim found that most of the clients were older women particularly in their late fifties and early sixties 191 In that same decade Kendall noted that most clients in the area of Seoul and its environs were small entrepreneurs such as owners of small companies shops and restaurants 192 Sarfati noted that in the 21st century many young people turned to mudang as part of a spiritual search or for counselling 193 Clients do not generally regard themselves as being committed exclusively to musok and may primarily visit Buddhist temples or Christian churches 139 Many mudang themselves believe that their rituals will be pleasing to the spirits regardless of the client s personal beliefs 138 On occasion a busy client will not attend the kut they have sponsored 194 If the ritual fails to produce the desired result the client may speculate that it was because of a bad performer errors in the ritual the presence of a ritually polluted attendee or a lack of sincerity on their part 195 If the client feels the mudang has not successfully solved their problem they may turn to another mudang 196 They may be disappointed or angry at this failure given their substantial financial investment 196 in some rare cases clients have sued mudang 196 The payment of money is often a source of mistrust between clients and mudang 197 Concerns about money are heightened by the lack of an institutional buffer between the client and ritual practitioner such as a temple or church 198 Altars and shrines edit nbsp A 19th century musindo painting of a sansin mountain spirit on display at the Brooklyn Museum images like this often appeared on altarsMost musok rituals center around altars 199 places for mudang to engage with supernatural beings 199 If in a client s home the mudang will often establish a temporary altar 199 If at a shrine the altar will often be a stone or an old tree 199 The mudang will also typically have a shrine in their home in which they host various gods and ancestors 124 These shrines are called sinbang harabŏjiŭibang or pŏptang 200 and each may have idiosyncratic elements 201 This home shrine may include paintings of deities called musindo 202 taenghwa 202 musokhwa 203 or sinhwa 203 These paintings are particularly important in the musok traditions of Seoul and of the northwest provinces Hwanghae and P yǒngan 200 they were traditionally not found in parts of the south 204 When included they are usually considered the most important objects present 205 and hang above the altar 200 They are regarded as seats for the deities literally manifesting the latter s presence rather than just visually depicting them 206 an idea similar to those found across much of Asia as in Buddhism and Hinduism 207 As well as being invited to inhabit a painting a deity may also be petitioned to depart it they are sometimes believed to leave of their own accord for instance if they abandon a mudang who keeps the image 208 Musindo paintings range from being crude to more sophisticated 209 Traditionally they use colors associated with the five directions 오방색 obang saek red blue green yellow white and black 64 Painters who produce musindo are traditionally expected to adhere to standards of purity while producing these artworks 210 bathing beforehand and refraining from eating fish or meat 211 Since the 1970s musindo have commonly been produced in commercial workshops 212 although a small number of traditional artists remain in South Korea 213 After a mudang s death their musindo were often ritually de animated and then burned during the 20th century 214 Some musindo have been donated to museums certain musok practitioners believe that the deity leaves the image if that occurs 215 Also present may be sinsang or deity statues made of wood plastic clay straw or metal 216 Deities may instead be represented by a white piece of paper the kŭlbal or kŭlmun onto which the entity s name is written in black or red ink 48 In musok the deity may also be seated in physical objects including stones clothing coins dolls or knives 48 and which may be concealed from view for instance being wrapped within cloth or inside a chest 71 Some mudang also include images of Buddhist deities on their shrines 217 nbsp Shrine in the kuttang at Ansan featuring statues of various deities Also present will typically be candlesticks offering bowls and incense pots 201 The home altar will often be dominated with bright primary colors in contrast to the muted earth tones which traditionally predominated in Korean daily life 93 The mudang s altar will also often be a place to store or display their ritual paraphernalia such as costumes 218 It may also include toys or dolls to amuse the child gods 219 Mudang typically bow when entering a shrine room 200 Offerings to the deities will be placed on this home shrine 220 Some offerings such as cooked rice fruit and water may be changed daily other offerings such as sweets cigarettes and liquor may be replaced more infrequently 221 Mudang hold that they provide offerings to these deities in thanks to the work that these entities have brought them a large assortment of offerings can thus give the impression that the mudang is financially successful 201 Worshipping the deities daily sustains their ongoing favor 210 Clients of the mudang may place offerings at this shrine as well as the mudang themselves 222 Deities are often believed to be present in all houses 223 Historical accounts often reference the presence of earthen jars tok hangari tanji filled with grain or smaller baskets or pouches as offerings to household deities and ancestors 73 This practice was declining in South Korea by the 1960s and 1970s 223 By the latter decades of the 20th century cardboard boxes had become common receptacles for these household offerings 73 Kuttang and pugundang edit nbsp The Kuksadang shrine is located on Inwang Mountain Seoul Kendall noted that many mudang regard the Kuksadang as Korea s premier kuttang 224 Shrines at which the musok rituals are performed are called kuttang or kut dang 굿당 and are typically located on mountains in South Korea 225 Shrines dedicated to significant tutelary spirits are known as tang or pugundang 226 and were historically often the foci for local cults such as those devoted to apotheosised heroes 227 Kuttang will often be identified on the exterior by the presence of a t aegŭk symbol a circular swirl of red blue and yellow that symbolizes the cosmos 228 The main ritual room is called the kut bang 229 and often contains an offering table on which offerings are placed 229 Mudang often rent a kuttang to perform their rituals especially if they do not have the room for such rites in their home 230 Some kuttang are regarded as being located at especially auspicious places at an area below a mountain the myŏngdang where positive spiritual energy is thought to congregate 231 Practitioners often also believe that deities encourage followers to choose specific locales for the placement of kuttang via dreams 232 Kuttang sometimes move over time 233 The Kuksadang which Kendall described as Seoul s most venerable kuttang 226 for instance was originally on South Mountain before being displaced by a Shinto shrine during the Japanese occupation of Korea and then moved onto Inwangsan a mountain to the north of the city 233 The growing urbanisation of South Korea since the late 20th century has meant that many are now surrounded by other buildings sometimes including other kuttang 234 The increasingly cramped nature of Korean urban living may have encouraged the increasing popularity of kuttang in isolated locations like mountains 226 On Jeju Island various villages have more than one shrine 235 new village shrines have been established on Jeju during the early 21st century 236 Kuttang are often run as a business 237 It is unclear exactly when they began renting themselves out as spaces for mudang to use although it has been argued that it was in the later years of the Joseon period 238 The kuttang will have a shrine keeper 239 who may be a mudang themselves 174 Other staff based there may include musicians called chaebi 239 kitchen staff to prepare food for kut rituals 230 and a maid called the kongyangju who is an intended mudang but who has not yet undergone their initiation ritual 239 As well as spaces for ritual these kuttang can also provide places for networking where mudang can witness the rituals of other practitioners and observe different regional styles 234 Kut rites edit Main article Gut ritual nbsp Diorama of a kut inside the National Museum of Korea SeoulThe central ritual of the mudang is called kut 240 These are large scale rites 241 characterised by rhythmic movements songs oracles and prayers 242 They are the only rituals in traditional Korean religion believed to give supernatural entities the ability to speak directly to humans 243 and are meant to create welfare promoting commitment between supernatural beings and humankind 244 There is regional diversity in the styles of kut 245 although some mudang mix these different styles 246 with each kut displaying features unique to its particular circumstances 247 A kut is sponsored for a specific purpose 248 A kut may be arranged due to an illness domestic quarrel or financial loss 188 The purpose of a kut is to get the supernatural beings to communicate expressing what it is that they want and why they are angry 26 In the 21st century it has become increasingly common to sponsor a kut to mark a new financial venture such as the opening of a mall or an office building 249 As well as being performed for clients the mudang will sometimes perform these rituals for their own personal reasons 250 in the 1990s for instance the prominent mudang Kim Kŭm hwa performed a kut for Korean reunification 251 The fee charged varies between mudang and the circumstances of the rite 252 However a kut is usually very expensive for the client of a mudang 253 based on his fieldwork in 1990s Chongho Kim noted that a kut in Seoul typically cost between 2 and 5 million won whereas in the rural area of Soy it cost between 300 000 and 2 5 million won 254 The precise fee may be negotiated between the mu and their client sometimes involving haggling 255 This will usually be agreed at a pre kut consultation 256 As well as paying for the mudang s time the fee also covers the wages of any assistants and the costs of material used in the rite 86 it may also reflect the years of training they have undertaken to be able to perform these rituals 257 nbsp A kut held on Jeju Island in 2006 The kut is usually held in private and few have a larger audience than the direct participants 258 although there are instances where those paying for a kut will invite neighbors to observe 259 These rituals are typically regarded as unsuitable for children to attend 260 Often it will take place outdoors and at night in an isolated rural location 261 at a kuttang shrine rented for the occasion 262 or in a private home 263 either that of the mudang 264 or that of their client 265 Setting up the kut may involve not only the mudang but also their apprentices assistants musicians butchers and cooks 266 Preparing and decorating the space is deemed a meaningful part of the ritual process 74 with those setting it up often concerned so as not to offend the spirits 267 Colorful paintings of the gods will often be brought into the space where the kut is to be performed 268 this is not part of the kut performed by Jeju simbang 180 God paintings are usually paper although in modern contexts are sometimes polyester ensuring that they are resistant to rain and tearing Other practitioners regard the use of polyester images as a corruption of tradition 269 These images are then often hung on a metal frame 74 In Taejŏn City and Ch ungch ŏng province a traditional practice involves decorating the ritual space with handmade mulberry paper cut into patterns 48 Various ritual items may be included in the kut ritual including swords the samjichang a drum drum stick and the spirit stick 270 The samjichang is a three pronged spear 271 The chukwonmun is a prayer card used in the kut onto which information like the name of the client may be written 272 The chukwonmun may then be attached to a drum 273 Offerings at the kut edit nbsp A kut performed in South Korea in 2007 showing the offering of meat to the spiritsAt kut food is offered to the spirits 274 This will often include fish rice rice cakes eggs sweets biscuits fruit and meat 275 Some of this food will be cooked some will be offered raw 250 To provide meat animal sacrifice occurs at most kut although is rare in televisual cinematic and museum depictions of these rites 276 A cow or pig killed for the purpose may be butchered in the shrine room 268 the carcass may be impaled on the trident if it fails to balance then this is seen as evidence that the deities do not accept the offering 277 When the ritual is intended to invoke Buddhist spirits the food offerings may be vegetarian 278 offering these entities meat would offend them 279 Food offerings may also be set out at the side for wandering spirits who are attracted by the ritual an act designed to avoid mishaps they could cause 280 Offered alongside the food will often be alcoholic drinks typically soju 281 as well as non food items like incense cloth money both real and imitation and paper flowers 282 The color of the flowers may indicate to whom they are offered pink for the spirits of military generals white for Buddhist deities and multi colored for ancestral spirits 283 The material used for the kut will often be bought in a manmulsang shop which specialises in traditional religious paraphernalia 284 In modern South Korea the ritual paraphernalia used is often of poor quality because it is intended to be burnt following the ceremony 285 These may be placed on offering tables one table will be the halabeoji sang devoted to the musok gods while the other table will be the jasang sang devoted to ancestral spirits 286 The mudang will often perform divination to determine if the offerings have been accepted by the supernatural beings 287 It is considered important for the person giving these offerings to do so with sincerity and devotion 288 with the mudang undertaking a form of divination called weighing the sincerity chŏngsŏng kŭllyang to determine if this has been the case 289 During the ritual attendees may be expected to give additional offerings of money to the mudang often while they are possessed intended as thanks both to them and to the spirits 290 These offerings given in addition to the ritual fee are called pyŏlbi or kajŏn 291 Any real money presented as offerings to the deities will be taken by the mudang 292 Much of the food assembled for the kut will then be distributed and consumed by the attendees at the end of the ritual 293 having been charged by auspiciousness by its involvement in the rite 201 Attendees may distribute some of this food to non attendees once they get home 294 they may also set some aside to feed any wandering spirits that might have followed them from the kut 201 In some kut especially those held at kut dang shrines food will also be left to decay 201 Performance at the kut edit nbsp A janggu drum on display at the National Museum of Korea in SeoulThe ritual begins with the mudang inviting supernatural entities to the altar after which they set out to entertain them 295 Music will often be involved in the kut 268 Musical instruments typically involved in kut include cymbals hourglass shaped drums called changgu and a gong 296 Also sometimes featured is a pipe the p iri 297 The kut will often begin with drumming 261 The mudang will often dance to the beat of the drums often swirling in circles something believed to facilitate the possession trance 298 They may hold short sticks to which white paper streamers are attached this device is intended to help channel the spirits into the mudang s body 280 The language used by a mudang during their rite is called mudang sori mudang s sounds 299 and is often deliberately archaic 279 The songs or chants employed are called muga 300 with each practitioner having their own personal repertoire largely inherited through oral tradition 301 As well as traditional folk songs some mudang have sung pop songs to entertain the spirits 302 Incantations and ritual words for communicating with the spirit are called chukeon 303 The mudang will often recite mythological stories during the ritual something deemed to contribute to its efficacy 304 These may be recited in full at a longer ritual or in condensed form for a shorter one 304 There may be breaks during the kut for instance giving time for the participants to eat 305 The mudang may also carry a fan and brass bells 297 Sarfati commented that these bells were a central symbol of musok 306 and their purpose is to attract the attention of the spirits 307 The costumes worn for these rituals are called sinbok 308 These colorful outfits resemble those documented from the 19th and early 20th centuries 309 and may involve a hanbok 297 The mansin may distinguish themselves from their assistants by having their hair in the Tchokchin mŏri style 267 For the kut the mudang will dress in the gods costume 131 with different deities associated with different items of clothing 308 They may change outfit over the course of the kut to reflect the different entities possessing them 310 This is not a practice that the sesup mu engage in 180 nbsp Sticks with white paper streamers are used by mansin to channel the spirits into their bodyAlso used in many kut are chaktu blades objects symbolizing the bravery of the possessing warrior spirits 311 The mudang may stab themselves in the chest with the knives 312 run the blade along their tongue 311 or press it to their face and hands 313 Riding knives is termed jakdugeori and involves the mudang walking barefoot on the upturned blade of the knife sometimes while speaking in gongsu or possessed speech 314 Practitioners claim that it is the spirits that prevent the mudang from being cut by the blade 315 and the ability to undertake such dangerous acts without harm is regarded as evidence for the efficacy of the rite 316 Some practitioners acknowledge instances in which they have been cut by the blades 317 Jakdugeori has become an expected part of staged or cinematic kut 318 The possession phase takes place at the climax of the ritual 319 In some kut traditions the mudang will stand upon an earthen jar while doing so 320 The term sin naerim descending of the spirits describes possession of the mansin intended in a manner that is largely controlled 321 Possessed speech is called kongsu 322 words from the possessing entity will then be spoken to the assembled persons by the mudang 323 Over the course of a kut a mansin may be possessed by a succession of different supernatural entities 324 On Jeju the simbang will provide a voice for the spirits 325 Yun noted that the simbang s so called medium speech typically lacked the dramatic intensity of the messages conveyed by the kangsin mu 326 The entities possessing the mudang will typically dispense advice to the ritual s sponsor and to other attendees 327 Supernatural beings will often relate that if a kut had been performed earlier misfortune would not have befallen the person sponsoring the kut 328 The final phase of the kut entails sending off the spirits who have been summoned often by burning name tags the josang ot clothes for ancestors or cloth straw shoes and imitation money 329 Towards the end of the kut wandering spirits that may have gathered are expelled 330 talismans may be distributed to attendees 331 and finally the mudang will remove their ceremonial clothing 302 Styles of kut edit The kkonmaji kut or flower greeting kut is an annual rite held by a mudang to entertain and feed their gods ancestors and clients 332 The sin kut are performed in gratitude to the deities and ancestors for granting a mu their spiritual power and thus a livelihood They are regarded as returning to these supernatural beings a portion of what the mu has earned 333 The sin kut can sometimes last 10 days 334 The byong kut is a ritual for expelling bad spirits sometimes from a human This sometimes involves the spirit forcing it into a bottle 335 The mich in kut is performed for a person who is mentally afflicted and often deemed to be possessed by one or more spirits 336 Exorcisms will often involve throwing scraps of food sometimes at the afflicted person 337 The possessing spirit is offered food to encourage it to leave 338 Historically the kut may have had entertainment value when there were few other outlets 339 Since the latter decades of the 20th century kut performed primarily for entertainment purposes rather than for religious reasons are referred to as kut gongyeon 340 Some practitioners who perform both draw a clear distinction between them 340 although many mudang still regard staged kut as genuine interactions with spirits 13 Performed in museums or at city festivals these kut often take place on raised stages surrounded by a seated audience 341 typically attracting journalists scholars and photographers 342 Staged kut are often dedicated to general causes such as national prosperity 343 sometimes the food placed as an offering is fake 344 They often involve folklorists or other scholars who explain the ritual to the audience 345 while the participants will often be dressed in a common uniform something not found in private kut 308 Mudang may see these staged rituals as an opportunity to attract potential new clients 346 uploading videos of them performing such rites to social media and YouTube 347 Kut gongyeon are often performed for their artistic value 297 By 2009 South Korea s government recognised ten regional kut styles as parts of the country s intangible cultural heritage and that year one of these traditions the Yǒngdŭng kut performed at Ch ilmǒri Shrine on Jeju was added to UNESCO s Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity 348 Purification edit Purity of both the body and the mind is a state that is required for taking part in rituals 349 Purification is considered necessary for an efficacious communion between living people and ancestral forms 349 Before any kut is performed the altar is always purified by fire and water as part of the first gori of the ritual itself 349 The colour white extensively used in rituals is regarded as a symbol of purity 349 The purification of the body is performed by burning white paper 349 Mountains landscape and pilgrimage edit In the musok religion rocks springs and sŏn ang trees may be regarded as being spiritually potent 350 The latter trees may be marked out by having strips of cloth or paper attached to them 351 nbsp Gardens of the Samseonggung a shrine for the worship of Hwanin Hwanung and Dangun In stories surrounding the mudang mountains are often represented as both places of sacred presence and also places associated with the ultimate origin of the mudang tradition 352 Each prominent mountain is deemed to have a specific mountain spirit who is sovereign upon it 73 The levels of spiritual power at a mountain are influenced not just by its associated deities but also the ki energy the equivalent of the Chinese qi that is present there 73 This ki is believed to channel through maek veins through the mountain landscape these can be disrupted by roads or other construction 73 Thus the potency of these mountains is thought to decline amid growing urbanisation and tourist access 73 In Korea this traditional geomancy is called p ungsu and is akin to the Chinese fengshui 353 Pilgrimages to mountain shrines of particular deities have long been part of Korean folk religion 91 Some mudang prepare for these pilgrimages by abstaining from eating meat fish or eggs and bathe before leaving 354 On arrival at the shrine the pilgrim will bow and provide an offering 91 Mountain landscapes regularly attract mudang who regard these as places that concentrate powerful deities and which are conducive to receiving visions They are also seen as places to replenish their bright energy myŏnggi 355 Mudang will make offerings not only at the mountains but also at springs and guardian trees en route 356 Incorrectly performing the pilgrimage may upset the sansin and bring about this spirit s retribution 357 In historical periods the mudang s mountain pilgrimages were typically rare events although improved transportation meant that by the 1990s these had become far more regular occurrences in South Korea 234 The most sacred mountain for the mudang is Mount Paektu located on North Korea s northern border with China 358 This is believed to channel ki to every other mountain in the peninsula 359 According to legend it is also the birthplace of Tan gun the national ancestor and first mudang 359 Since the 1990s mudang from South Korea have travelled to China to make pilgrimages to this mountain 360 Talismans and divination edit An important component of the mudang s role is to produce talismans called pujŏk bujeok which are presented as providing the bearer with good fortune 361 These pujŏk are often based on Hanja Korean versions of Chinese ideograms 362 These may be distributed to attendees at the end of a rite 331 Clients will often affix these to the internal walls of their home 363 Divination is termed jeom 364 One form of divination sometimes performed during other rituals involves a person picking one of a selection of rolled up silk flags The color of the selected flag is then interpreted as bearing meaning for that individual 365 Green and yellow flags are for instance often seek as indicating bad fortune 365 while red is regarded as being auspicious 366 The mugŏri style of divination involves casting rice and coins onto a tray 367 In Korean vernacular religion there are also ritual specialists who perform divinations and produce amulets but who do not engage in kut rituals like the mudang 368 History editDetailed accounts of mudang rituals prior to the modern period are rare 369 and the fact that the tradition is orally transmitted means it is difficult to trace historical processes 11 Prehistory edit Korean shamanism goes back to prehistoric times pre dating the introduction of Buddhism and Confucianism and the influence of Taoism in Korea 370 Vestiges of temples dedicated to gods and spirits have been found on tops and slopes of many mountains in the peninsula 370 Shamanism can be traced back to 1 000 BC 371 The religion has been part of the culture of the Korean Peninsula since then Historically Korean Shamanism Musok was an orally transmitted tradition that was mastered mainly by illiterate low ranking women within the neo Confucian hierarchy 372 However several records and texts have documented the origin of Korean Shamanism One of these texts is Wei Shi which traces Shamanism to the third century 373 Chinese dynastic histories mention the importance of designated shamans among early religious practices in Japan but not Korea 374 The Korean studies scholar Richard D McBride thus asserts that non shamans were able to practice under their own authority 374 Evidently the history of Korean Shamanism remains a mystery However foreign religions including Christianity Buddhism Confucianism and Taoism have influenced the development of Korean Shamanism 375 The development of Korean Shamanism can be categorized into different groups The first category involves simple transformation In this transformation the influence of the practices and beliefs of other religions on Korean Shamanism was superficial 376 The second category of transmission was syncretistic This category involves Shamanism being incorporated into the practices and beliefs of other cultures including Confucianism Christianity Taoism and Buddhism 376 These religions had different levels of influence on Korean Shamanism The third category involves the formation of new religions through the mixing of beliefs and practices of Shamanism with those of other dominant religions 376 Although many Koreans converted to Buddhism when it was introduced to the peninsula in the 4th century and adopted as the state religion in Silla and Goryeo it remained a minor religion compared to Korean shamanism 377 The term mu is first recorded in the 12th century Yisanggugjip 378 It also appears in the Samguk Sagi from that century 379 The use of images of the musok deities hanging on the wall is first recorded from the 13th century 380 Joseon Korea and Japanese Occupation edit See also Misin tapa undong The Goryeo kingdom was replaced by the Joseon dynasty which saw an increase in governmental persecution of the mudang 381 who were seen as having a low status 382 Confucianism was the dominant ideology in Joseon Korea contributing to these suppressions 383 later historians argued that this was connected to the elite s desire to gain more power by challenging rivals to their Confucian system 384 Confucians accepted the existence of the spirits invoked in the mudang s rites 385 but argued that there were better ways of dealing with these supernatural beings 386 They regarded the musok rituals as improper 386 criticising the presence of both sexes together in environments where alcohol was being consumed 387 Korea s Neo Confucian scholars used the derogatory term ŭmsa for non Confucian ceremonies of which they considered the mudang rituals among the lowest 381 nbsp A mudang performs a kut in a painting titled Munyeo sinmu 무녀신무 巫女神舞 made by Shin Yunbok in 1805 In the Joseon dynasty mudang belonged to one of eight outcast groups that were expelled from the capital city 388 The Gyeonggukdaejeon law book prescribed 100 lashes in public for anyone found to be supporting them 383 This persecution could prove deadly in an extreme case a mudang was beheaded in 1398 389 In an oft cited incident Jeju governor Yi Hyǒngsang initiated a purge of simbang on the island in 1702 destroying 129 shrines 390 Taxes were levied on the mudang s rituals both to discourage the practice but also to raise revenues for the government these taxes remained in place until the 1895 Kabo reforms 391 At the same time as the government persecuted the mudang they also turned to them in emergencies like epidemics droughts and famines 389 By the late 19th century many Korean intellectuals eager for modernisation came to regard musok as superstition that should be eradicated 392 they increasingly referred to it with the term misin superstition 393 These ideas were endorsed in The Independent Korea s first vernacular newspaper 394 Many of these intellectuals were Christian thus regarding the mudang s spirits as evil demons 395 In 1896 police launched a crackdown by arresting mudang destroying shrines and burning paraphernalia 396 The Japanese Empire invaded Korea in 1910 397 During the Japanese occupation the occupiers tried to incorporate musok within or replace it with State Shinto 398 399 The Japanese colonial Governor General of Chōsen presented the mudang as evidence for Korean cultural backwardness an approach intended to legitimate Japanese imperial rule 400 Japanese efforts to suppress the tradition included the Mind Cultivation Movement launched in 1936 401 Korean elites largely supported these suppressions for a variety of reasons one of which was to demonstrate Korean cultural advancement to the Japanese occupying Korea 402 It was in this colonial context that scholars developed the idea that the mudang were continuing an ancient Korean religion and thus represented the spiritual and cultural repository of the Korean people 403 Influenced by the Western use of the term shamanism as a cross cultural category some Korean scholars speculated that the mudang tradition descended from Siberian traditions 180 The Japanese scholar Torii Ryuzō proposed the mudang as a remnant of a primordial Shinto with both stemming from Siberian shamanism 404 These ideas were built on by nationalist Korean scholars Ch oe Nam sŏn and Yi Nŭnghwa in the 1920s 404 Cho e reversed Torii s framework by emphasising the primacy of ancient Korean over Japanese tradition as the transmitter of Siberian religion 405 while Yi promoted the mudang tradition as the residue of what he called sin gyo divine teachings meaning a primordial Korean religion that lost its purity through the arrival of Confucianism and Buddhism 405 At the time Korean elites remained wary about this new positive reassessment 406 Korean War and Division edit nbsp Kim Kŭm hwa became one of the world s most famous mudang from the 1980s onwardThe situation for Musok worsened after the division of Korea and the establishment of a northern Socialist government and a southern pro Christian government 407 The Korean War and subsequent urbanisation of Korean society resulted in many Koreans moving around the peninsula impacting the distinct regional traditions of the mudang 408 Many mudang from Hwanghae in North Korea resettled in Inchon in South Korea strongly influencing musok there for example 213 This migration meant that by the early 21st century kangsin mu were increasingly dominant in areas like Jeju where sesŭp mu historically predominated generating rivalry between the two traditions 50 In North Korea most formal religious activity was suppressed 409 Mudang and their families were targeted as members of the hostile class and were considered to have bad sǒngbun tainted blood 410 In South Korea Christianity spread rapidly from the 1960s onward becoming the country s dominant religion by the start of the 21st century 411 South Korean leader Syngman Rhee launched the Sin Saenghwal Undong New Life Movement which destroyed many village shrines 412 This policy continued as the Saemaul Undong New Community Movement of his successor Park Chung Hee which led to a surge in the police suppression of mudang during the 1970s 413 Such outright persecution ended after Park s assassination in 1979 412 The popularization of folklore studies in the 1970s resulted in the notion of musok as Korea s ancient tradition gaining acceptance among growing numbers of educated South Koreans 414 In 1962 South Korea had introduced a Cultural Properties Protection Law that recognised performing arts as intangible cultural heritage some folklorists used this to help defend the mudang 414 In the latter part of the 20th century the mudang rituals were increasingly revived as a form of theatrical performance linked to cultural conservation and tourism 415 From the 1980s onward South Korea s government designated certain mudang as Human Cultural Treasures 416 One of the best known examples was Kim Geum hwa Kim Kŭm hwa who from the 1980s performed for foreign anthropologists toured Western countries and appeared in documentaries 417 Reflecting the view of musok as an important part of Korea s cultural heritage a kut was depicted on a South Korean postage stamp while musok elements were included at the Seoul 1988 Olympic Arts Festival and the 1988 inauguration of President Roh Tae woo 418 Paintings of musok deities became increasingly collectable in the 1980s and 1990s 419 The mudang were often regarded favorably within South Korea s minjung Popular Culture Movement pro democracy campaign from the 1970s several mudang were active in the movement and became emblematic of its struggle 420 Advocacy groups were also formed to advance the cause of the mu 421 keen to present the tradition as lying at the heart of Korean culture 421 while the 1980s also saw mudang begin to write books about themselves 422 Mudang also adapted to new technologies from the 1990s they increasingly used the Internet to advertise their services 423 while portrayals of mudang became widespread on South Korean television in the 2010s 424 This increasing cultural visibility improved the mudang s social image 425 Since the early 19th century a number of movements of revitalization or innovation of traditional Korean shamanism arose They are characterized by an organized structure a codified doctrine and a body of scriptural texts They may be grouped into three major families the family of Daejongism or Dangunism the Donghak originated movements including Cheondoism and Suunism and the family of Jeungsanism including Jeung San Do Daesun Jinrihoe the now extinct Bocheonism and many other sects 426 Demographics edit nbsp A shrine to a sansin mountain spirit inside the Buddhist temple at Saseongam in South KoreaMudang have conventionally belonged to the lowest social class 427 Chongho Kim noted that most mudang he encountered in the 1990s had a very poor educational background 428 and were also typically financially poor 429 Most mudang are female 430 with the religion being dominated by women 431 This may connect to origin myths that present musok as first developing among priestesses 432 Chongho Kim cautioned that the notion of musok being a women s religion ignored the antagonistic attitude that most Korean women had towards it 433 Approximately a fifth of mudang are male paksu 321 although the latter are proportionately over represented in 21st century media representations 434 There is regional variation in these gender differences on Jeju Island there were more male than female simbang prior to the 1950s and proportions of male practitioners remain higher there than on the Korean mainland 435 Determining the number of mudang is difficult 24 In the early 21st century Sarfati noted that the number of mudang was estimated at being over 200 000 24 a number that she observed was not diminishing 436 This stability is not evenly distributed among different types of mudang in 2019 Yung noted that the hereditary sesŭp mu including the Jeju simbang were in steep decline 437 There is also regional variation in the presence of mudang by the 21st century mudang were more common in Seoul than in rural parts of South Korea 438 while Yun observed that the practice was undeniably more prominent on Jeju than on the mainland 439 Musok is not recorded in the South Korean census because the government does not regard adherence to it as being akin to identifying as a Christian or a Buddhist 440 A late 20th century survey by the Korean Gallup Research Institute indicated that 38 percent of the adult population of South Korea had used a mudang 441 In North Korea according to demographic analyses by Religious Intelligence approximately 16 percent of the population practises traditional ethnic religion 442 Since at least the 20th century mudang have travelled abroad to perform rituals 150 many for instance travel to Japan to serve clients in Japan s Korean minority 443 There are also mudang living in Europe 32 and a small number of non Koreans have become mudang a 2007 documentary covered the story of a German mudang 119 Kendall noted the existence of one mudang living outside Korea who was promoting their teachings through New Age style workshops 444 Reception edit nbsp A diorama of a mudang worshipping at a shrine at the Lotte World Folk Museum in SeoulMusok has been suppressed throughout Korean history under a succession of dominant ideologies including Confucianism Japanese colonialism and Christianity 445 At the start of the 21st century the mudang remained widely stigmatized in South Korean society facing widespread prejudice 446 In 2021 Sarfati observed that while the religion was still stigmatized it was experiencing growing acceptance in South Korea 447 The religion s critics often regard mudang as swindlers 448 people who manipulate the gullible 449 Critics regularly focus their critique on the large sums of money that the mudang charge 450 and maintain that the expenses required for its rituals are wasteful 451 Critics have also accused mudang of disrupting the civil order with their rituals 450 Kendall noted that there was a generally adversarial relationship between mudang and Protestants in South Korea 135 the latter regarding musok as Devil worship 452 Mainline Protestant theologians have sometimes blamed musok for predisposing Koreans to Pentecostalism and the idea that prayer can generate financial reward 453 Christians have sometimes harassed mudang at their places of work or during their ceremonies 454 something which some mudang regard as religious discrimination 455 Mudang began appearing in South Korean film in the 1960s 456 Early portrayals in the 1960s and 1970s generally showed them as harmful frightening and anti modern figures as in Ssal 1963 Munyŏdo 1972 and Iŏdo 1977 457 From the mid 2000s films increasingly portrayed them as members of a living tradition situated in modern urban environments as in Ch ŏngham Posal 2009 and Paksu Kŏndal 2013 458 The 2000s also saw several successful documentaries about mudang appear in Korean cinemas 175 as well as increasing appearances of mudang on Korean television 459 Korean artists who have cited musok rituals as an influence on their work include Nam June Paik who recreated an exorcism kut for several performances from the late 1970s 460 Musok has also been presented in museums although often with emphasis placed on its folkloric and aesthetic value rather than its role as a religious practice 461 South Korea s government often embrace kut as a traditional performing artform but marginalise its religious function 462 Musok has influenced some Korean new religions such as Cheondoism and Jeungsanism and some Christian churches in Korea make use of practices rooted in musok 463 See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Shamanism of Korea Asian witchcraft Gasin faith Korean folklore Korean numismatic charm Korean traditional festivals Jongmyo jerye Religion in Korea Samgong bon puri Taoism in KoreaFootnotes edit Or 바리데기 Bari degi thrown away baby References editCitations edit a b Kim 2018 p 27 Ch oe 1989 p 225 Baker 2008 p 25 Yun 2019 p 5 Sarfati 2021 pp 79 96 Yun 2019 pp 25 49 Sarfati 2021 p 8 Kendall 2009 p 63 Bruno 2013 p 175 Yun 2019 p 22 Kendall Yang amp Yoon 2015 p 57 Bruno 2013 p 175 Yun 2019 p 184 Bruno 2013 p 176 Yun 2019 p 25 Kendall 2009 Yun 2019 p 25 Kendall 2009 p 28 Yun 2019 p 25 a b c d e Sarfati 2021 p 96 Lee 1981 p 1 Sarfati 2021 p 96 a b Sarfati 2021 p 29 Kim 2018 p 21 Yun 2019 p 58 Sarfati 2021 p 8 a b c d Yun 2019 p 190 a b c Bruno 2013 p 178 Kendall 2009 p 29 Yun 2019 p 190 Kim 2018 pp 21 22 223 Kim 2018 pp 21 22 Sarfati 2021 pp 8 9 Hutton 2001 pp vii viii Hutton 2001 p viii Baker 2008 p 20 a b c d Sarfati 2021 p 9 Kim 2018 p 31 a b Kim 2018 p 35 Kim 2018 p 26 Bruno 2013 p 178 Kim 2018 pp 24 49 Sarfati 2021 p 101 a b Baker 2008 p 18 Kendall 2009 p 31 Kim 2018 p 49 Sarfati 2021 p 101 Sarfati 2021 p 101 a b Sarfati 2021 p 167 Yun 2019 p 10 a b Kim 2018 p 25 a b Sarfati 2021 p 7 a b Lee 1981 p 3 Kim 2018 p 23 Sarfati 2021 p 1 a b Kendall 2009 p 179 Kendall 2009 p ix Kim 2018 p 23 Sarfati 2021 p 8 Bruno 2013 p 180 Lee 1981 p 2 Kendall 2021 p 2 Lee 1981 p 5 Kendall 2009 p x Sarfati 2021 p 149 a b c d Kendall 2009 p x Ch oe 1989 p 224 Yun 2019 p 19 Sarfati 2021 pp 7 83 Ch oe 1989 p 224 Yun 2019 p 19 Ch oe 1989 p 230 Yun 2019 p 20 Sarfati 2021 p 83 a b c d Kendall Yang amp Yoon 2015 p 20 Sarfati 2021 pp 8 83 a b c Yun 2019 p 20 Kendall 2009 p 179 Yun 2019 p 20 a b Yun 2019 p 183 Yun 2019 pp 3 19 Kendall Yang amp Yoon 2015 p 19 Sarfati 2021 p 7 Bruno 2013 p 180 Kim 2018 p 23 Sarfati 2021 p 8 Kim 2018 p 166 Kim 2018 p 32 Kendall 2009 pp ix x Bruno 2013 p 179 Kim 2018 p 23 Yun 2019 p 181 Sarfati 2021 p 10 Yun 2019 p 181 Kendall 2009 p 182 Bruno 2013 pp 180 182 Sarfati 2021 pp 8 15 Kim 2018 pp 76 190 Yun 2019 p 175 a b Kendall 2009 p 136 a b Kendall Yang amp Yoon 2015 p 22 Sarfati 2021 p 110 a b Kendall Yang amp Yoon 2015 p 81 Kendall Yang amp Yoon 2015 p 74 a b Kendall Yang amp Yoon 2015 p 82 Kim 2018 p 216 a b c d e Kendall Yang amp Yoon 2015 p 32 a b Kendall Yang amp Yoon 2015 p 21 Kendall 2021 pp 3 5 a b c d e f g h i Kendall 2021 p 5 a b c Sarfati 2021 p 30 Yun 2019 p 76 Kendall Yang amp Yoon 2015 p 31 Yun 2019 p 82 Sarfati 2021 p 30 Kendall 2009 p 167 Sarfati 2021 p 49 Sarfati 2021 p 48 Kendall Yang amp Yoon 2015 p 33 Bruno 2013 p 194 Sarfati 2021 pp 46 47 Yun 2019 p 137 Lee 1981 p 15 Kendall 2009 p 36 Sarfati 2021 p 34 Kendall 2009 p 36 Kendall Yang amp Yoon 2015 p Plate 2 a b Sarfati 2021 p 45 Kendall 2009 p 50 a b Baker 2008 p 24 Baker 2008 pp 24 25 a b c Baker 2008 p 25 a b c d Baker 2008 p 28 Baker 2008 p 23 a b Kendall 2021 p 8 a b Yun 2019 p 78 a b Kendall 2009 p 167 Kim 2018 p 36 Kendall Yang amp Yoon 2015 p 85 Sarfati 2021 pp 49 142 a b Sarfati 2021 p 142 Religions of Korea In Practice Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press 2007 pp ix ISBN 978 0 691 11346 3 OCLC 67728089 신뿌리 lt 초공본풀이 gt 에서 그러했기 때문이라는 답 Shin Y 2017 p 228 a b Hong T 2016b p 59 a b Yun 2019 p 89 Kendall 1988 p 33 Hong T 2002 p 25 Hong T 2016b p 21 Hong T 2016b pp 143 145 Seo D amp Park G 1996 pp 227 228 Hong T 2016b pp 33 36 Seo D amp Park G 1996 pp 228 230 Hong T 2016b pp 37 42 Hong T 2016b pp 43 47 Hong T 2016b pp 47 51 Seo D amp Park G 1996 pp 239 241 Seo D amp Park G 1996 pp 241 242 Hong T 2016b pp 52 57 Hong T 2016b pp 58 59 a b Chacatrjan 2015 p 57 a b c Sarfati 2021 p 144 Yun 2019 p 128 a b Yun 2019 p 129 Kendall 1988 p 8 Baker 2008 p 26 Kendall 2009 pp 36 168 Sarfati 2021 p 28 Kendall 1988 p 8 a b Kendall 1988 p 102 Yun 2019 p 107 Kim 2018 p 38 Kendall 1988 p 91 Baker 2008 p 27 Kwon 2009 p 6 Yun 2019 pp 10 11 a b Kendall 2009 p xxi Sarfati 2021 p 47 Kim 2018 pp 3 98 Sarfati 2021 pp 3 4 a b Kendall 2009 p xx a b Sarfati 2021 p 1 Sarfati 2021 p 74 a b Sarfati 2021 p 16 a b Kendall 2009 p 30 Yun 2019 p 13 Kim 2018 p 50 Yun 2019 p 103 Yun 2019 pp 80 110 Kendall 2009 p 121 Sarfati 2021 p 171 Sarfati 2021 pp 16 165 Yun 2019 p 167 Kendall 1988 p 6 Sarfati 2021 p 142 Sarfati 2021 p 178 Kendall 2009 p 76 a b c Kim 2018 p 72 Kendall 2009 p 123 Kendall Yang amp Yoon 2015 pp 70 82 Kim 2005 pp 9 10 note 10 Kim 2005 pp 53 54 Kendall 2009 p xx Kim 2018 p 169 Sarfati 2021 p 7 Sarfati 2021 p 28 Kendall Yang amp Yoon 2015 p 35 Kendall 2009 p 26 Ch oe 1989 p 224 Sarfati 2021 p 147 a b Kendall 1988 p 63 Kendall 1988 p 64 Kim 2018 p 169 Kendall 1988 p 79 a b Kendall 2009 p 75 Sarfati 2021 p 44 Kendall Yang amp Yoon 2015 p 87 Sarfati 2021 p 51 Kendall Yang amp Yoon 2015 p 87 Kendall 2009 pp xx 67 Kendall 2009 p 67 Kendall 2009 p 70 Kendall 2009 p 71 Kendall 2009 p 100 a b Kendall 2009 p 112 a b Sarfati 2021 p 83 Yun 2019 p 153 Yun 2019 p 157 Kendall Yang amp Yoon 2015 p 9 Sarfati 2021 p 52 a b c d Yun 2019 p 19 a b c Baker 2008 p 21 Kim 2018 pp xiv 141 Kim 2018 p 128 Kendall 2009 p 139 Baker 2008 p 21 Kim 2018 p 103 Kendall 2009 p 2 Kim 2018 p 223 Baker 2008 p 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Grau ISBN 978 0 385 52390 5 Kim 2018 p 157 a b Yun 2019 p 65 Kendall 2009 p 10 Kim 2018 pp 86 87 Yun 2019 p 65 Sarfati 2021 p 5 a b Kendall 2009 p 19 Kim 2018 p 209 Kendall 2009 p xxii Kendall 2009 p 20 Kim 2018 pp 195 196 Sarfati 2021 pp 84 86 Kendall 2009 p 20 Yun 2019 p 70 Kendall Yang amp Yoon 2015 p 124 Kendall 2009 pp 21 22 Sarfati 2021 pp 5 6 a b Kendall 2009 pp 15 16 Kendall 2009 p 109 Sarfati 2021 pp 18 177 Sarfati 2021 p 2 Sarfati 2021 p 6 Lee 2010s passim Sarfati 2021 p 119 Kim 2018 pp 51 52 Kim 2018 p 208 Lee 1981 p 12 Kendall 1988 p 6 Kendall 2009 p xx Kim 2018 p 34 Yun 2019 p 22 Sarfati 2021 p 19 Kim 2018 p 106 Lee 1981 p 12 Kim 2018 p 151 Sarfati 2021 pp 18 19 Yun 2019 p 22 Sarfati 2021 p 3 Yun 2019 p 146 Sarfati 2021 p 14 Yun 2019 p 145 Baker 2008 p 4 Kim 2018 p 7 Country Profile Korea North Democratic People s Republic of Korea Religious Intelligence UK Archived from the original on 13 October 2007 Yun 2019 pp 23 81 Sarfati 2021 p 168 Kendall 2009 p 207 Kim 2018 p 160 Kim 2018 p xiii Yun 2019 p 80 Sarfati 2021 p 4 Kim 2018 pp 166 167 Yun 2019 pp 4 162 Yun 2019 p 132 a b Sarfati 2021 p 166 Yun 2019 p 66 Kendall 2009 p 6 Kendall 2009 p 131 Kendall 2009 p 24 Kim 2018 pp 157 158 Kendall 2009 p 24 Sarfati 2021 p 59 Sarfati 2021 pp 64 65 Sarfati 2021 pp 68 70 Sarfati 2021 p 131 Kang 2019 p 112 Sarfati 2021 p 96 97 Yun 2019 p 165 Kim Andrew E 1 July 2000 Korean Religious Culture and Its Affinity to Christianity The Rise of Protestant Christianity in South Korea Sociology of Religion 61 2 117 133 doi 10 2307 3712281 JSTOR 3712281 Sources edit Baker Don 2008 Korean Spirituality Dimensions of Asian Spirituality Honolulu University of Hawai i Press ISBN 978 0 8248 3233 9 Bruno Antonetta L 2013 The Posal between the Mudang and Buddhist In between and Bypassing Journal of Korean Religions 4 2 175 196 Bruno Antonetta L 2016 Translatability of Knowledge in Ethnography The Case of Korean Shamanic Texts Rivista degli studi orientali 89 1 121 139 JSTOR 45111754 Chacatrjan Arevik 2015 An Investigation on the History and Structure of Korean Shamanism International Journal of Korean Humanities and Social Sciences 59 Ch oe Kil sŏng 1989 The Symbolic Meaning of Shamanic Ritual in Korean Folk Life Journal of Ritual Studies 3 2 217 233 JSTOR 44368938 Choi Joon sik 2006 Folk Religion The Customs in Korea Seoul Ewha Womans University Press ISBN 978 89 7300 628 1 Hutton Ronald 2001 Shamans Siberian Spirituality and the Western Imagination London and New York Hambledon and London ISBN 978 1 85295 324 9 Kang Mi Jung 2019 The Sound of Shamans in the Works of Nam June Paik and Early Korean Video Artists RE SOUND 8th International Conference on Media Art Science and Technology 110 115 doi 10 14236 ewic RESOUND19 18 Kendall Laurel 1988 The Life and Hard Times of a Korean Shaman Of Tales and the Telling of Tales Honolulu University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 1145 7 Kendall Laurel 2009 Shamans Nostalgias and the IMF South Korean Popular Religion in Motion Honolulu University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 3398 5 Kendall Laurel 2021 Gods and Things Is Animism an Operable Concept in Korea Religions 12 283 283 doi 10 3390 rel12040283 Kendall Laurel Yang Jongsung Yoon Yul Soo 2015 God Pictures in Korean Contexts The Ownership and Meaning of Shaman Paintings Honolulu University of Hawai i Press doi 10 21313 hawaii 9780824847647 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 8248 6833 8 OCLC 986613847 Kim Chongho 2018 2003 Korean Shamanism The Cultural Paradox London and New York Routledge ISBN 978 1 138 71051 1 Kwon Heonik 2009 Healing the Wounds of War New Ancestral Shrines in Korea PDF The Asia Pacific Journal 7 24 4 1 17 Lee Jung Young 1981 Korean Shamanistic Rituals Religion and Society The Hague Mouton ISBN 978 90 279 3378 2 McBride Richard D July 2006 What is the Ancient Korean Religion Acta Koreana 9 2 1 30 Sarfati Lora 2021 Contemporary Korean Shamanism From Ritual to Digital Bloomington Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 05717 4 Sorensen Clark W July 1995 The Political Message of Folklore in South Korea s Student Demonstrations of the Eighties An Approach to the Analysis of Political Theater Fifty Years of Korean Independence Seoul Korean Political Science Association Yun Kyoim 2019 The Shaman s Wages Trading in Ritual on Cheju Island Korean Studies of the Henry M Jackson School of International Studies Seattle University of Washington Press ISBN 978 0 295 74595 4 Further reading editEnglish language sources edit Kim Tae kon 1998 Korean Shamanism Muism Jimoondang Publishing Company ISBN 978 89 88095 09 6 Yunesŭk o Han guk Wiwŏnhoe 1985 Korea Journal Korean National Commission for UNESCO a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Keith Howard Hrsg Korean Shamanism Revival survivals and change The Royal Asiatic Society Korea Branch Seoul Press Seoul 1998 Dong Kyu Kim Looping effects between images and realities understanding the plurality of Korean shamanism The University of British Columbia 2012 Laurel Kendall Shamans housewives and other restless spirits Woman in Korean ritual life Studies of the East Asien Institute University of Hawaii Press Honolulu 1985 Kwang Ok Kim Rituals of resistance The manipulation of shamanism in contemporary Korea In Charles F Keyes Laurel Kendall Helen Hardacre Hrsg Asian visions of authority Religion and the modern states of East and Southeast Asia University of Hawaii Press Honolulu 1994 S 195 219 Hogarth Hyun key Kim 1998 Kut Happyness Through Reciprocity Bibliotheca shamanistica Vol 7 Budapest Akademiai Kiado ISBN 978 963 05 7545 4 ISSN 1218 988X Daniel Kister Korean shamanist ritual Symbols and dramas of transformation Akademiai Kiado Budapest 1997 Dirk Schlottmann Cyber Shamanism in South Korea Online Publication Institut of Cyber Society Kyung Hee Cyber University Seoul 2014 Dirk Schlottmann Spirit Possession in Korean Shaman rituals of the Hwanghaedo Tradition In Journal for the Study of Religious Experiences Vol 4 No 2 The Religious Experience Research Centre RERC at the University of Wales Trinity Saint David Wales 2018 Dirk Schlottmann Dealing with Uncertainty Hell Joseon and the Korean Shaman rituals for happiness and against misfortune In Shaman Journal of the International Society for Academic Research on Shamanism Vol 27 no 1 amp 2 p 65 95 Budapest Molnar amp Kelemen Oriental Publishers 2019 Korean language sources edit 홍태한 Hong Tae han 2002 Han guk seosa muga yeon gu 한국 서사무가 연구 Studies on Korean Shamanic Narratives Seoul Minsogwon ISBN 978 89 5638 053 7 Anthology of prior papers a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint postscript link 2016 Han guk seosa muga ui yuhyeong byeol jonjae yangsang gwa yeonhaeng wolli 한국 서사무가의 유형별 존재양상과 연행원리 Forms per type and principles of performances in Korean shamanic narratives Seoul Minsogwon ISBN 978 89 285 0881 5 Anthology of prior papers a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint postscript link 현용준 Hyun Yong jun 현승환 Hyun Seung hwan 1996 Jeju do muga 제주도 무가 Shamanic hymns of Jeju Island Han guk gojeon munhak jeonjip Research Institute of Korean Studies Korea University 강소전 Kang So jeon 2012 Jeju do simbang ui mengdu yeon gu Giwon jeonseung uirye reul jungsim euro 제주도 심방의 멩두 연구 기원 전승 의례를 중심으로 Study on themengduof Jeju shamans Origins transfer ritual PhD Cheju National University 강정식 Kang Jeong sik 2015 Jeju Gut Ihae ui Giljabi 제주굿 이해의 길잡이 A Primer to Understanding the JejuGut Jeju hak Chongseo Minsogwon ISBN 978 89 285 0815 0 Retrieved July 11 2020 Kim Hae Kyung Serena 2005 Sciamanesimo e Chiesa in Corea per un processo di evangelizzazione inculturata in Italian Gregorian Biblical BookShop ISBN 978 88 7839 025 6 김태곤 1996 한국의 무속 Daewonsa ISBN 978 89 5653 907 2 Lee Chi ran 2010s The Emergence of National Religions in Korea PDF Archived from the original PDF on 13 April 2014 서대석 Seo Daeseok 2001 Han guk sinhwa ui yeon gu 한국 신화의 연구 Studies on Korean Mythology Seoul Jibmundang ISBN 978 89 303 0820 5 Retrieved June 23 2020 Anthology of Seo s papers from the 1980s and 1990s a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint postscript link 서대석 Seo Daeseok 박경신 Park Gyeong sin 1996 Seosa muga il 서사무가 1 Narrative shaman hymns Volume I Han guk gojeon munhak jeonjip Research Institute of Korean Studies Korea University 신연우 Shin Yeon woo 2017 Jeju do seosa mugaChogong bon puri ui sinhwa seong gwa munhak seong 제주도 서사무가 lt 초공본풀이 gt 의 신화성과 문학성 The Mythological and Literary Nature of the Jeju Shamanic NarrativeChogong bon puri Seoul Minsogwon ISBN 978 89 285 1036 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Korean shamanism amp oldid 1187055235, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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