Skip to Main Content
It looks like you're using Internet Explorer 11 or older. This website works best with modern browsers such as the latest versions of Chrome, Firefox, Safari, and Edge. If you continue with this browser, you may see unexpected results.
Korean Religions: Recommended Texts
-
Korean Spirituality by Don Baker"Korea has one of the most dynamic and diverse religious cultures of any nation on earth. Koreans are highly religious, yet no single religious community enjoys dominance. Buddhists share the Korean religious landscape with both Protestant and Catholic Christians as well as with shamans, Confucians, and practitioners of numerous new religions. As a result, Korea is a fruitful site for the exploration of the various manifestations of spirituality in the modern world. At the same time, however, the complexity of the country’s religious topography can overwhelm the novice explorer. Emphasizing the attitudes and aspirations of the Korean people rather than ideology, Don Baker has written an accessible aid to navigating the highways and byways of Korean spirituality. He adopts a broad approach that distinguishes the different roles that folk religion, Buddhism, Confucianism, Christianity, and indigenous new religions have played in Korea in the past and continue to play in the present while identifying commonalities behind that diversity to illuminate the distinctive nature of spirituality on the Korean peninsula." - University Of Hawai'i Press
-
The Zen Monastic Experience by Robert E. Buswell"Robert Buswell, a Buddhist scholar who spent five years as a Zen monk in Korea, draws on personal experience in this insightful account of day-to-day Zen monastic practice. In discussing the activities of the postulants, the meditation monks, the teachers and administrators, and the support monks of the monastery of Songgwang-sa, Buswell reveals a religious tradition that differs radically from the stereotype prevalent in the West. The author's treatment lucidly relates contemporary Zen practice to the historical development of the tradition and to Korean history more generally, and his portrayal of the life of modern Zen monks in Korea provides an innovative and provocative look at Zen from the inside." - Princeton University Press
-
The Confucian Transformation of Korea: A Study of Society and Ideology by Martina Deuchler"Legislation to change Korean society along Confucian lines began at the founding of the Chosŏn dynasty in 1392 and had apparently achieved its purpose by the mid seventeenth century. Until this important new study, however, the nature of Koryŏ society, the stresses induced by the new legislation, and society's resistance to the Neo-Confucian changes imposed by the Chosŏn elite have remained largely unexplored.
To explain which aspects of life in Koryŏ came under attack and why, Martina Deuchler draws on social anthropology to examine ancestor worship, mourning, inheritance, marriage, the position of women, and the formation of descent groups. To examine how Neo-Confucian ideology could become an effective instrument for altering basic aspects of Koryŏ life, she traces shifts in political and social power as well as the cumulative effect of changes over time. What emerges is a subtle analysis of Chosŏn Korean social and ideological history" - Harvard University Press
-
Shamans, Housewives and Other Restless Spirits: Women in Korean Ritual Life by Laurel Kendall“This is a book about the women of Enduring Pine Village, Republic of Korea, in 1976 with shamanistic practices as its focus. The title derives from Laurel Kendall's finding that ‘shamans and housewives perform analogous tasks and deal with the same spirits’ (p. 166). In this delightful narrative about some women in the village, focusing on issues of women's power and status, the author is concerned with public powerlessness and private strengths, a contradiction that permeates a Korean woman's entire life. Kendall vividly describes a kut (shamanistic ritual) in the ethnographic present, a practice now questioned in anthropology. She notes that mansin (shamans) are almost all women in male-dominated Korean society. The author accuses scholars, including Korean ones, who have presented Korean women in a negative light of being superstitious. Subsequent chapters sketch the village's history, the afflictions that cause clients to consult mansin, and the gods and spirits involved in shamanism. Kendall points out that the care and feeding of ancestors is assigned to men. Her emphasis on the complementarity of women's and men's roles continues in a chapter on women's rites, in which she emphasizes that men's and women's ritual division of labor reflects ‘men's and women's contrasting social experiences’” - Emiko Ohnuki-Tierney
-
Christianity in Korea by Robert E. Buswell; Timothy S. Lee"Despite the significance of Korea in world Christianity and the crucial role Christianity plays in contemporary Korean religious life, the tradition has been little studied in the West. Christianity in Korea seeks to fill this lacuna by providing a wide-ranging overview of the growth and development of Korean Christianity and the implications that development has had for Korean politics, interreligious dialogue, and gender and social issues. The volume begins with an accessibly written overview that traces in broad outline the history and development of Christianity on the peninsula. This is followed by chapters on broad themes, such as the survival of early Korean Catholics in a Neo-Confucian society, relations between Christian churches and colonial authorities during the Japanese occupation, premillennialism, and the theological significance of the division and prospective reunification of Korea. Others look in more detail at individuals and movements, including the story of the female martyr Kollumba Kang Wansuk; the influence of Presbyterianism on the renowned nationalist Ahn Changho; the sociopolitical and theological background of the Minjung Protestant Movement; and the success and challenges of Evangelical Protestantism in Korea. The book concludes with a discussion of how best to encourage a rapprochement between Buddhism and Christianity in Korea." - University of Hawaii Press