{"title":"Village Tutelary Deities as a Cultural and Axiological Symbol in Korea and Romania","authors":"Jeong Hwan Kim","doi":"10.38003/CCSR.1.1-2.1","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"An artistic creation expressed as a cultural phenomenon symbolizes the characteristics\nof a nation’s soul and mental life. And the cultural heritage of a nation, which shows\nus the religious symbols and signs in the great nature to be harmonized with the profane and the sacred, is also easily found in the East and the West. Troytsa, Jangseung,\nSotdae: these can be taken as representative. Regarding the Romanian cultural heritage\nof Troytsa, the village tutelary deity conforms very similarly to Korean Jangseung and\nSotdae. Jangseung and Sotdae, representative popular sculptured creations of Korean\nfolk beliefs, and which are related to the totem pole, are close to villagers’ lives, being\nthe divine protection of the village’s peace, as well as functioning as a signpost and\na boundary, ensuring a good harvest and preventing misfortune, etc. A Sotdae, which\nfeatures a bird on top of a pole, is recognized as an object of belief mixed between the\n“Tree of the World” and the “Bird of the Soul” in northern-cultural Asian shamanism.\nUnlike them, the Romanian Troytsa, which took root in an ancient faith (the Totem of\nthe Tree), is a divine, sculptured creation mixed with Christianity, generally located at\nthe entrance of a village or at an intersection of roads. These tutelary deities and their\nvariations share functions and characteristics, but their features and patterns are different. Jangseung have angry and fearful countenances in order to turn away diseases\nand evil spirits, but Sotdae and Troytsa maintain the style of a menhir or a column as\none of the folk beliefs related to the totem pole. Even today, Troytsa, Jangseung, Sotdae\nare being generated and developed as representative cultural prototypes and village\ntutelary deities.","PeriodicalId":51871,"journal":{"name":"Cultural Studies Review","volume":"4 1","pages":"9-23"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2020-11-15","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Cultural Studies Review","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.38003/CCSR.1.1-2.1","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"Social Sciences","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
An artistic creation expressed as a cultural phenomenon symbolizes the characteristics
of a nation’s soul and mental life. And the cultural heritage of a nation, which shows
us the religious symbols and signs in the great nature to be harmonized with the profane and the sacred, is also easily found in the East and the West. Troytsa, Jangseung,
Sotdae: these can be taken as representative. Regarding the Romanian cultural heritage
of Troytsa, the village tutelary deity conforms very similarly to Korean Jangseung and
Sotdae. Jangseung and Sotdae, representative popular sculptured creations of Korean
folk beliefs, and which are related to the totem pole, are close to villagers’ lives, being
the divine protection of the village’s peace, as well as functioning as a signpost and
a boundary, ensuring a good harvest and preventing misfortune, etc. A Sotdae, which
features a bird on top of a pole, is recognized as an object of belief mixed between the
“Tree of the World” and the “Bird of the Soul” in northern-cultural Asian shamanism.
Unlike them, the Romanian Troytsa, which took root in an ancient faith (the Totem of
the Tree), is a divine, sculptured creation mixed with Christianity, generally located at
the entrance of a village or at an intersection of roads. These tutelary deities and their
variations share functions and characteristics, but their features and patterns are different. Jangseung have angry and fearful countenances in order to turn away diseases
and evil spirits, but Sotdae and Troytsa maintain the style of a menhir or a column as
one of the folk beliefs related to the totem pole. Even today, Troytsa, Jangseung, Sotdae
are being generated and developed as representative cultural prototypes and village
tutelary deities.
期刊介绍:
Cultural Studies Review is a peer-reviewed journal devoted to the publication and circulation of quality thinking in cultural studies—in particular work that draws out new kinds of politics, as they emerge in diverse sites. We are interested in writing that shapes new relationships between social groups, cultural practices and forms of knowledge and which provides some account of the questions motivating its production. We welcome work from any discipline that meets these aims. Aware that new thinking in cultural studies may produce a new poetics we have a dedicated new writing section to encourage the publication of works of critical innovation, political intervention and creative textuality.