Korean Bongsan Talchum mask theatre: A window to the past and the pride of the present

Masked folk theatre performances in medieval Korea were apparently the only socially acceptable form of artistic expression of common people. They expressed popular mindsets, aspirations, and desires in stereotyped images. The study of this cultural phenomenon can reveal much about Korean national c...

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Main Author: Yuri G. Smertin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University) 2024-12-01
Series:RUDN Journal of World History
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.rudn.ru/world-history/article/viewFile/42215/24288
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author Yuri G. Smertin
author_facet Yuri G. Smertin
author_sort Yuri G. Smertin
collection DOAJ
description Masked folk theatre performances in medieval Korea were apparently the only socially acceptable form of artistic expression of common people. They expressed popular mindsets, aspirations, and desires in stereotyped images. The study of this cultural phenomenon can reveal much about Korean national character. The study aims to analyze the content of a Bongsan Talchum play and to reveal its deeper meanings through the prism of history and ethno-psychology. The study is based on a full text of a play published by Korean scholar Cho Okon. In Russian historiography, there are no academic works on the history of Bongsan Talchum theatre. The author relies on the works of Korean and Western researchers, who to a greater or lesser extent covered the history and current state of this type of mask theatre, as well as on his personal impressions obtained during his academic internship in South Korea. The research concludes that Bongsan Talchum in its criticism of negative aspects of social reality did not oppose established norms and existing orders, but satirized undesirable deviations from those. It was a short-term expression of an alternative value system and had a compensatory function. At present, Bongsan Talchum is becoming a cultural symbol of Korea both at home and abroad.
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spelling doaj-art-52ec5559ce004a52b0ad9d79f00072d32025-01-09T07:42:46ZengPeoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University)RUDN Journal of World History2312-81272312-833X2024-12-0116449050310.22363/2312-8127-2024-16-4-490-50321091Korean Bongsan Talchum mask theatre: A window to the past and the pride of the presentYuri G. Smertin0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0432-0197Kuban State UniversityMasked folk theatre performances in medieval Korea were apparently the only socially acceptable form of artistic expression of common people. They expressed popular mindsets, aspirations, and desires in stereotyped images. The study of this cultural phenomenon can reveal much about Korean national character. The study aims to analyze the content of a Bongsan Talchum play and to reveal its deeper meanings through the prism of history and ethno-psychology. The study is based on a full text of a play published by Korean scholar Cho Okon. In Russian historiography, there are no academic works on the history of Bongsan Talchum theatre. The author relies on the works of Korean and Western researchers, who to a greater or lesser extent covered the history and current state of this type of mask theatre, as well as on his personal impressions obtained during his academic internship in South Korea. The research concludes that Bongsan Talchum in its criticism of negative aspects of social reality did not oppose established norms and existing orders, but satirized undesirable deviations from those. It was a short-term expression of an alternative value system and had a compensatory function. At present, Bongsan Talchum is becoming a cultural symbol of Korea both at home and abroad.https://journals.rudn.ru/world-history/article/viewFile/42215/24288koreamask dramadancemusicshamanismbuddhismhumorsatirecultural heritage
spellingShingle Yuri G. Smertin
Korean Bongsan Talchum mask theatre: A window to the past and the pride of the present
RUDN Journal of World History
korea
mask drama
dance
music
shamanism
buddhism
humor
satire
cultural heritage
title Korean Bongsan Talchum mask theatre: A window to the past and the pride of the present
title_full Korean Bongsan Talchum mask theatre: A window to the past and the pride of the present
title_fullStr Korean Bongsan Talchum mask theatre: A window to the past and the pride of the present
title_full_unstemmed Korean Bongsan Talchum mask theatre: A window to the past and the pride of the present
title_short Korean Bongsan Talchum mask theatre: A window to the past and the pride of the present
title_sort korean bongsan talchum mask theatre a window to the past and the pride of the present
topic korea
mask drama
dance
music
shamanism
buddhism
humor
satire
cultural heritage
url https://journals.rudn.ru/world-history/article/viewFile/42215/24288
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