바로가기메뉴

본문 바로가기 주메뉴 바로가기

The Review of Korean Studies

  • P-ISSN1229-0076
  • E-ISSN2773-9351
  • SCOPUS, ESCI

Acquired Tastes: Urban Impacts on Jeju Shamanic Ritual

The Review of Korean Studies / The Review of Korean Studies, (P)1229-0076; (E)2773-9351
2018, v.21 no.1, pp.93-124
https://doi.org/10.25024/review.2018.21.1.004
Tommy Tran (University of California)

Abstract

What are the implications of a Starbucks bag tied on a tree as an offering to village gods or a Buddhist chant intoned in place of a shamanic invocation? This article re-considers the cultural meanings of practical material changes in Jeju shamanism in relation to its rapid urbanization since the early 2000s. Though often romanticized as an idyllic rural paradise or a bastion of shamanic practice, Jeju City has grown into a large complex and cosmopolitan city with constant access to international markets. Urban change had a profound impact on Jeju shamanism in every aspect. Once purely region- and community-specific, shamanic rituals, despite their decline in the depopulating countryside, have seen in some aspects an accidental vitality that came with urban interactions. Mainland Korean and foreign goods grace altars and the changed pace of life prompts practitioners to adopt new forms to keep old meanings. This article observes that as rural communities proactively maintain shamanic rites, they hardly are passive recipients of new things and ideas from the city that looms large over them. Although numbers of rural shrine worshippers are indeed declining, where rituals remain pertinent to local communities, Jeju shamanism’s interactions with urbanization demonstrate significant, and sometimes accidental, dynamism.

keywords
Jeju Island, shamanism, urbanization, globalization

Reference

1.

Bendix, Regina. 1997. In Search of Authenticity. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.

2.

Gang, Jeongsik. 2007. “Danggut ui sesiuiryejeok seonggyeok” [Danggut’s Characteristics of the Lunar New Year’s Rituals]. Hanguk musokhak [Korean Folklore Studies] 14: 85-113.

3.

Gang, Jeongsik, and Taehan Hong. 2004. “Jejudo danggut gwa gyeongje” [Jeju Island’s Danggut and Economics]. Bigyo minsokhak [Comparative Folkloristics] 27: 211-37.

4.

Gwon, Gwi-sook. 2005. “Changing Labor Processes of Women’s Work: The Haenyo of Jeju Island.” Korean Studies 25: 114-36.

5.

Heo, Namchun. 2011. Jejudo bonpuri wa jubyeon sinhwa [Jeju Island’s Bonpuri and the Mythologies of Neighboring Regions]. Seoul: Doseo chulpan pogosa.

6.

Hong, Sunyoung. 2013. “Beyond the Festival Time and Space: The Case of a ‘Traditional’ Festival on Jeju Island South Korea.” PhD diss., Leeds Metropolitan University.

7.

Hyeon, Yongjun. 2009. Jejudo saramdeul ui sam [Jeju Island Peoples’ Lifestyles]. Seoul: Minsogwon.

8.

Hyeon, Yongjun. 2013. Jejudo maeul sinang [Jeju Island Village Beliefs]. Seoul: Bogosa.

9.

Kendall, Laurell. 1996. “Shamans and the Spirits of Capitalism.” American Anthropologist 98 (3): 512-27.

10.

Kim, Seong-nae. 1989. “Chronicle of Violence, Ritual and Mourning: Cheju Shamanism in Korea.” PhD diss., University of Michigan.

11.

Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, Barbara. 2006. “World Heritage and Cultural Economics.” In Museum Frictions: Public Cultures/Global Transformations, edited by Ivan Karp, Corinne Kratz, Lynn Szwaja, and Tomas Ybarra-Frausto, 161-202. Durham and London: Duke University Press.

12.

Mun, Mubyeong. 1996. “Jejudo ui Yeongdeung-gut” [Jeju Island’s Yeongdeung-gut]. Bigyo minsokhak [Comparative Folkloristics] 13: 241-58.

13.

Pai, Hyung-il. 2013. Heritage Management in Korea and Japan: The Politics of Antiquity and Identity. Seattle: University of Washington Press.

14.

Pettid, Michael J. 2003. “May the Gods Strike You Dead! Healing through Subversion in Shamanic Narratives.” Asian Folklore Studies 62 (1): 113-32.

15.

Safarti, Liorta. 2009. “Objects of Worship: Material Culture in the Production of Shamanic Rituals in South Korea.” PhD diss., Indiana University.

16.

Smith, Laurajane. 2006. Uses of Heritage. London and New York: Routledge.

17.

Tangherlini, Timothy R., and Sallie Yea, eds. 2008. Sitings: Critical Approaches to Korean Geography. Honolulu: University of Hawaiʻi Press.

18.

Tran, Tommy. 2017. “Axis Mundi: The City and Geographies of Identity in Cheju Island, South Korea.” PhD diss., University of California at Los Angeles.

19.

Von Sydow, Carl Wilhelm. 1948. Selected Papers on Folklore. Edited by Laurits Bødker. Copenhagen: Rosenkilde and Bagger.

20.

Yi, Yeonggwon. 2005. Saero sseun Jejusa: jibangsa, yeoksa ilkki ui saeroun sido [A Newly Written History of Jeju: A Local History, a New Attempt at Reading History]. Seoul: Hyumeoniseuteu.

21.

Yun, Kyoim. 2007. “Performing the Sacred: Political Economy and Shamanic Ritual on Cheju Island, South Korea.” PhD diss., Indiana University.

22.

Yun, Kyoim. 2015. “The Economic Imperative of UNESCO Recognition: A South Korean Shamanic Ritual.” Journal of Folklore Research 52 (2-3): 181-98.

The Review of Korean Studies