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The Adoption of Kṣitigarbha and the Ten Kings of Hell in Shamanic Death Rituals in Korea

원문정보

DOMINIK RUTANA

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초록

영어

By late Chosŏn times, the ideas of hell, punishment, and possible ways of salvation expressed in the Kṣitigarbha and the Ten Kings of Hell belief (chijang siwang sinang 地藏十王信仰) had not only deeply penetrated popular consciousness, but also gained so much popularity that they influenced other worldviews, including shamanism. Accordingly, Korean shamans started to adopt motifs derived from the belief into their mythology and ritual, something which is still visible today. The way Korean shamans adopted and applied motifs derived from the belief in Kṣitigarbha and the Ten Kings of Hell to death rituals like chinogi kut 진오기굿or ssikkim kut 씻김굿 varies from ritual to ritual but they serve as a medium that connects the present (isŭng 이승) and the otherworld (chŏsŭng 저승). Korean shamans use this medium, along with other symbols and deities such as Princess Pari, not only to explain and secure the ontological transformation of the deceased from worldly to otherworldly beings during the liminal process of the ritual, but also to meet the needs of their clients and make the ritual more persuasive. This amalgamation of Buddhist and shamanistic elements, a kind of bricolage, should be considered a creation of the specific mythical thought pattern of Korean shamans.

목차

Abstract
Introduction
Historical Background
Shamanic Mythical Thought
Adoption of Kṣitigarbha and the Ten Kings of Hell in Shamanic Death Rituals
Adoption of the Ten Kings of Hell in Chinogi Kut
Adoption of the Ten Kings of Hell in Ssikkim Kut
Adoption of the Bodhisattva Kṣitigarbha in Chinogi Kut and Ssikkim Kut
Conclusion
References

저자정보

  • DOMINIK RUTANA A senior researcher at Institute of Asian Religions.

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