The World & I Online Magazine, ONline Archive and Educational Resource  
World & I School | World & I Homeschool | World & I College | World & I Library
Username:   Password:      Subscribe Now   Register   About Us | Contact Us | FAQs      
The World & I Archive Peoples of the World Book Reviews Worldwide Folktales Fathers of Faith
Search  
Sort by: Results Listed:
Date Range:    Advanced Search

The World & I Magazine
 
Current Issue
The Arts
Life
Natural Science
Culture
Book World
Modern Thought
  Resources
American Waves
Book Reviews
Fathers of Faith
Footsteps of Lincoln
Millennial Moments
Peoples of the World
Profiles in Character
Traveling the Globe
Writers and Writing

Modernization and Filial Piety in Rural Korea


Article # : 17393 

Section : CULTURE
Issue Date : 1 / 1990  4,861 Words
Author : Clark W. Sorensen
Clark W. Sorensen is assistant professor in the Jackson School of International Studies at the University of Washington. He has been studying the rural Korean village he calls Toennae since 1986.

       A traveler taking a country bus inland from Masan, an industrial port on Korea's south coast, will traverse traffic-clogged highways, bustling markets, and acre after acre of vinyl greenhouses. In these greenhouses are grown fruit and vegetables for the markets of Masan and Pusan, the nearby port of some four million inhabitants through which most of Korea's international trade passes. Thirty minutes out of town, however, one can meander through peaceful country villages, seemingly unchanged from time immemorial.
       
        Alongside a country byway leading to the village to Toennae* stands an old gate surrounded by a fence. Inside the gate is a plaque with a long inscription in hanmun, the classical Chinese that was used for all official purposes in Korea until the late nineteenth century. Built in a traditional Chinese-derived style, the gate is old enough to make one wonder whether it had been the entrance to some building, now disappeared. In fact, this particular gate has always stood in isolation by the side of the road. It is an example of a hyojamun, a type of gate built during the Chosön Dynasty (1392-1910) to commemorate an act of filial piety.
       
        Traveling past the gate into the village, one finds several imposing ancestral halls set among the farmhouses nestled into the hillside. These halls, normally empty, are used seasonally by the members of lineages that originated in the village to worship distant patrilineal ancestors. In the past, when virtually everybody in Korea was either a farmer or a landlord who lived off farm rents, and relations to kin defined one's social position, sons and brothers tried to remain in their native place. Over the generations most Korean villages had come to be dominated by the patrilineal descendants ... (2000 of 28805 Characters)
Read Full Article

Copyright © 2004 The World & I Online. All rights reserved. Terms of Use | Privacy Policy