Текст томруулах:    
David E. Shaffer

Seasonal Customs of Korea Korean Culture Series 7 - Second edition - Seoul Hollym 2017 - 207

WOK 1221

In this fast-paced, rapidly changing world, Korea has not been unaffected. Many long-observed seasonal customs still practiced just a few short decades ago have now disappeared or are quickly disappearing. (Children prefer computer games to kite-flying and top-spinning on Lunar New Year’s Day.) Although a custom may no longer be explicitly followed, knowledge of it has more importance than merely satisfying one’s inquisitiveness. The essence of the past manifests itself in the present. Korea’s long-observed seasonal customs of the past do still, however, have considerable influence upon the formation of the behavioral and attitudinal patterns of present-day society. In this way, customs of yesteryear live on to influence the present, and ultimately, the future.

Most seasonal customs have been formed and developed as a result of the cycles of agriculture. Thus, they reflect people’s everyday life. As seasonal customs have been formed around unified experiences of people’s lives, Korea’s traditional culture has been transmitted through deeply embedded teachings, within which the sentiments of the people have also been preserved.

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9781565912465

history and culture general history civilization