• Title/Summary/Keyword: Ganghogado

Search Result 1, Processing Time 0.013 seconds

The Significance of Nature's silence in sijo (시조의 자연, 그 '말없음'의 의미론)

  • Ryoo Su-Yeoul
    • Sijohaknonchong
    • /
    • v.20
    • /
    • pp.5-27
    • /
    • 2004
  • This article aims to clarify the significance of nature's silence in sijo by comparing with the works taking misunderstanding and lie as poetic materials. Sijo poets praise the silence of nature with correlating the false of the mundane language. This is the natural consequence in which they arrive by denying both 'mundane' and 'language'. In mundane world people struggle for their interest and distinguish between right and wrong. Therefore the silence of nature is not the principle of life but counter-pair of mundane politics. Sadaebu[사대부], the sijo poets praise the silence of nature to realize needs to rise above the boundary of right and wrong. Then they don't recognize the nature as pure scenary. As Confucianist, they recognize the nature in connection with mundane world. Because they have two persona, the scholar [사] and politician[대부]. In Confucianism the naturalization of moral and moralization of nature is pursued simultaneously.

  • PDF