The Mudang: Gendered Discourses on Shamanism in Colonial Korea

This dissertation examines the discursive production of mudang, also known as shamans, during the late Chosŏn Dynasty (eighteenth to nineteenth-centuries) and during the Japanese colonial period in Korea (1910-1945). The many discursive sites on mudang articulated various types of difference, often...

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Main Author: Hwang, Merose
Other Authors: Schmid, Andre
Language:en_ca
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/32010
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OTU.1807-320102014-03-05T03:43:08ZThe Mudang: Gendered Discourses on Shamanism in Colonial KoreaHwang, Merosemodern Korean historywomen and gendershamanismindigenous identitycolonialismpostcolonialismmudang058203320453031803580733This dissertation examines the discursive production of mudang, also known as shamans, during the late Chosŏn Dynasty (eighteenth to nineteenth-centuries) and during the Japanese colonial period in Korea (1910-1945). The many discursive sites on mudang articulated various types of difference, often based on gender and urban/rural divides. This dissertation explores four bodies of work: eighteenth to nineteenth-century neo-Confucian reformist essays, late nineteenth-century western surveys of Korea, early twentieth-century newspapers and journals, and early ethnographic studies. The mudang was used throughout this period to reinforce gendered distinctions, prescribe spatial hierarchies, and promote capitalist modernity. In particular, institutional developments in shamanism studies under colonial rule, coupled with an expanded print media critique against mudang, signalled the needs and desires to pronounce a distinct indigenous identity under foreign rule. Chapter One traces three pre-colonial discursive developments, Russian research on Siberian shamanism under Catherine the Great, neo-Confucian writings on "mudang," and Claude Charles Dallet’s late nineteenth-century survey of Korean indigenous practices. Chapter Two examines the last decade of the nineteenth-century, studying the simultaneous emergence of Isabella Bird Bishop’s expanded discussion on Korean shamanism alongside early Korean newspapers’ social criticisms of mudang. Chapter Three looks at Korean newspapers and journals as the source and product of an urban discourse from 1920-1940. Chapter Four examines the same print media to consider why mudang were contrasted from women as ethical household consumers and scientific homemakers. Chapter Five looks at Ch’oe Nam-sŏn and Yi Nŭng-hwa’s 1927 treatises on Korean shamanism as a celebration of ethnic identity which became a form of intervention in an environment where Korean shamanism was used to justify colonial rule.Schmid, AndreSong, JesookPoole, Janet2009-112012-01-17T16:57:20ZWITHHELD_TWO_YEAR2012-01-17T16:57:20Z2012-01-17Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/32010en_ca
collection NDLTD
language en_ca
sources NDLTD
topic modern Korean history
women and gender
shamanism
indigenous identity
colonialism
postcolonialism
mudang
0582
0332
0453
0318
0358
0733
spellingShingle modern Korean history
women and gender
shamanism
indigenous identity
colonialism
postcolonialism
mudang
0582
0332
0453
0318
0358
0733
Hwang, Merose
The Mudang: Gendered Discourses on Shamanism in Colonial Korea
description This dissertation examines the discursive production of mudang, also known as shamans, during the late Chosŏn Dynasty (eighteenth to nineteenth-centuries) and during the Japanese colonial period in Korea (1910-1945). The many discursive sites on mudang articulated various types of difference, often based on gender and urban/rural divides. This dissertation explores four bodies of work: eighteenth to nineteenth-century neo-Confucian reformist essays, late nineteenth-century western surveys of Korea, early twentieth-century newspapers and journals, and early ethnographic studies. The mudang was used throughout this period to reinforce gendered distinctions, prescribe spatial hierarchies, and promote capitalist modernity. In particular, institutional developments in shamanism studies under colonial rule, coupled with an expanded print media critique against mudang, signalled the needs and desires to pronounce a distinct indigenous identity under foreign rule. Chapter One traces three pre-colonial discursive developments, Russian research on Siberian shamanism under Catherine the Great, neo-Confucian writings on "mudang," and Claude Charles Dallet’s late nineteenth-century survey of Korean indigenous practices. Chapter Two examines the last decade of the nineteenth-century, studying the simultaneous emergence of Isabella Bird Bishop’s expanded discussion on Korean shamanism alongside early Korean newspapers’ social criticisms of mudang. Chapter Three looks at Korean newspapers and journals as the source and product of an urban discourse from 1920-1940. Chapter Four examines the same print media to consider why mudang were contrasted from women as ethical household consumers and scientific homemakers. Chapter Five looks at Ch’oe Nam-sŏn and Yi Nŭng-hwa’s 1927 treatises on Korean shamanism as a celebration of ethnic identity which became a form of intervention in an environment where Korean shamanism was used to justify colonial rule.
author2 Schmid, Andre
author_facet Schmid, Andre
Hwang, Merose
author Hwang, Merose
author_sort Hwang, Merose
title The Mudang: Gendered Discourses on Shamanism in Colonial Korea
title_short The Mudang: Gendered Discourses on Shamanism in Colonial Korea
title_full The Mudang: Gendered Discourses on Shamanism in Colonial Korea
title_fullStr The Mudang: Gendered Discourses on Shamanism in Colonial Korea
title_full_unstemmed The Mudang: Gendered Discourses on Shamanism in Colonial Korea
title_sort mudang: gendered discourses on shamanism in colonial korea
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/32010
work_keys_str_mv AT hwangmerose themudanggendereddiscoursesonshamanismincolonialkorea
AT hwangmerose mudanggendereddiscoursesonshamanismincolonialkorea
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