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Death Mourning And The Afterlife In Korea Illustrated Charlotte Horlyck

  • SKU: BELL-230205172
Death Mourning And The Afterlife In Korea Illustrated Charlotte Horlyck
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Death Mourning And The Afterlife In Korea Illustrated Charlotte Horlyck instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Hawaii Press
File Extension: EPUB
File size: 19.22 MB
Pages: 282
Author: Charlotte Horlyck, Michael J. Pettid
ISBN: 9780824839680, 0824839684
Language: English
Year: 2014
Edition: Illustrated

Product desciption

Death Mourning And The Afterlife In Korea Illustrated Charlotte Horlyck by Charlotte Horlyck, Michael J. Pettid 9780824839680, 0824839684 instant download after payment.

Death and the activities and beliefs surrounding it can teach us much about the ideals and cultures of the living. While biologically death is an end to physical life, this break is not quite so apparent in its mental and spiritual aspects. Indeed, the influence of the dead over the living is sometimes much greater than before death. This volume takes a multidisciplinary approach in an effort to provide a fuller understanding of both historic and contemporary practices linked with death in Korea. Contributors from Korea and the West incorporate the approaches of archaeology, history, literature, religion, and anthropology in addressing a number of topics organized around issues of the body, disposal of remains, ancestor worship and rites, and the afterlife. The first two chapters explore the ways in which bodies of the dying and the dead were dealt with from the Greater Silla Kingdom (668–935) to the mid-twentieth century. Grave construction and goods, cemeteries, and memorial monuments in the Koryŏ (918–1392) and the twentieth century are then discussed, followed by a consideration of ancestral rites and worship, which have formed an inseparable part of Korean mortuary customs since premodern times. Chapters address the need to appease the dead both in shamanic and Confucians contexts. The final section of the book examines the treatment of the dead and how the state of death has been perceived. Ghost stories provide important insight into how death was interpreted by common people in the Koryŏ and Chosŏn (1392–1910) while nonconformist narratives of death such as the seventeenth-century romantic novel Kuunmong point to a clear conflict between Buddhist thought and practice and official Neo-Confucian doctrine. Keeping with unendorsed views on death, the final chapter explores how death and the afterlife were understood by early Korean Catholics of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.

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