• 제목/요약/키워드: minjung

검색결과 373건 처리시간 0.026초

생활한복의 형성 배경과 그 내용적 특성에 대한 고찰 (The Background and the Pursuits of Saenghwal Hanbok)

  • 정혜경
    • 복식
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    • 제51권2호
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    • pp.27-42
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    • 2001
  • The objectives of this study are to give a definition and to find out the background and the pursuits of Saenghwal Hanbok. Conclusions are described as follows : 1. Saenghwal Hanbok and Gaeryang Hanbok are used together at the same tome, but they are different the background and the pursuits. Gaeryang Hanbok was pursued practical aspects - activities, simplification, sanitation, courtesy, economy, and diversity. And then Saenghwal Hanbok was added the pursuits of Minjung's image, traditional image, modern esthetic. 2. The background of Saenghwal Hanbok is divided into two group. One is the Minjung Hanbok in University, and the other is the recreated Hanbok in mass fashion. The former was effected to youth culture, political quarrel of culture movement, anti-government group. The Latter was a tendency toward reviving the tradition. 3. The characters of Saenghwal Hanbok were a national tradition, a resistance. the image of poor Minjung, a revival of the tradition, and a diversity and negotiation of post-modernism.

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삶의 미술, 소통의 확장: 김봉준과 두렁 (Art of Life, Expansion of Dialogue: Kim Bongjun and the Art Collective Dureong)

  • 유혜종
    • 미술이론과 현장
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    • 제16호
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    • pp.71-103
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    • 2013
  • This paper explores the key figure of minjung misul ("the people's art"), Kim Bongjun, and the art collective Dureong in the relationship between 'dialogue' and the dissidents' structural critique of Korea's modernities. During the 1980s' prodemocracy movement, the minjung artists and other dissident intellectuals used the notion of dialogue as metaphor for and allegory of democracy to articulate not only Koreans' experience of modern history, which they saw as "alienating" and "inhumane," but also the discrepancies between Koreans' predicaments and their political aspirations and their working toward the fulfillment of those ideals. Envisioning alternative forms of modernities, Kim Bongjun and other Dureong members paid attention to the fundamental elements of art, which consist of art as a modern institution, as well as the everyday lives of people as the very site of Koreans' modernities. They endeavored to create "art of life," which presumes its being part of people's lives, based on the cultural and spiritual traditions of the agrarian community. They also participated in the national culture movement, the minjung church, and the alternative-life movement to radically envision everyday lives through the indigenous reinterpretation of democratic values. Despite the significant role played by the church mission and its community involvement, its effects on minjung misul have received little attention in the relevant studies. Thus, I consider in particular the minjung church's and the alternative-life movement's confluence of multiple cultural and social constituencies in relation to Kim and the Dureong collective's vision of a new art and community.

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Bad Subjects and the Transnational Minjung: The Poetry of Jason Koo and Ed Bok Lee

  • Grotjohn, Robert
    • 영어영문학
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    • 제64권3호
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    • pp.307-327
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    • 2018
  • In light of Korean inclusion of its diaspora as part of the nation, a "creolized" approach that brings together constructions of the bad subject of Asian American studies with conceptions of the Korean minjung grounds an analysis of two poets as they might be considered from a bi-national, Korean and U.S. American, perspective. The poets Ed Bok Lee and Jason Koo show different ways of being the bad subject. Lee is clearly a bad American subject, resisting American white racial hegemony, and his poetry often addresses a kind of American minjung multiculturalism, as is shown in poems from his first two books Real Karaoke People and Whorled. He challenges some aspects of contemporary Korea, and might be a kind of Korean bad subject in those challenges. Koo, on the other hand, resists the call to bad subjectivity, so that his poetry may not fit the preferred paradigm of Asian American studies, as he recognizes. As he resists that paradigm, he also gives little attention to his Korean heritage, so his not-bad American subjectivity becomes bad Korea subjectivity. He recovers some measure of badness in the final poem of Man on Extremely Small Island when he connects briefly to his Korean heritage and his Asian American present. The creolized juxtaposition of the bad subject with the minjung suggests the use of these poems in considering both American and Korean society.

한국 대안적 공론장의 변화과정과 추동 요인에 대한 고찰 (The Transformation of Alternative Public Sphere and its Motive in Korea)

  • 김은규
    • 한국언론정보학보
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    • 제33권
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    • pp.87-114
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    • 2006
  • 대안적 공론장의 현실화를 지칭하는 용어는 저항언론, 대항언론, 민중언론, 지하언론, 풀뿌리언론, 대안언론, 시민미디어 등 다양한 개념이 존재하다. 시대적 상황에 따라, 논자의 강조점에 따라 다양한 개념들이 제시되고 있는 것이다. 본 논문은 한국의 언론구조가 민주적 공론장으로서 제 기능을 수행하지 못함에 따라 이를 보완하고자 했던 대안적 공론장의 변화과정을 고찰하고 있다. 정리하자면, 한국의 대안적 공론장은 70년대의 저항언론 자유언론에서, 80년대의 대항언론 민중언론, 90년대의 대안언론, 2000년대의 대안언론 시민미디어의 유형으로 변화해왔다. 이러한 변화를 추동하는 요인은 무엇보다도 시민사회의 확장과 사회운동 진영이다. 그리고 사회운동 주도세력의 성격에 따라 대안적 공론장의 내용성 역시 변화해 왔다. 80년대 민중운동이 한국의 사회운동을 이끌었을 때는 대안적 공론장도 당파성에 입각한 민중언론의 성격을 나타냈으며, 90년대 시민운동으로 그 주도권이 바뀌었을 때는 대안언론, 시민미디어의 유형으로 발현됐다. 또한, 사회운동과 대안적 공론장은 변증법적으로 변화 발전했다. 요컨대, 사회운동은 대안적 공론장을 통해 운동의 활성화와 역량을 축적하면서 사회변화를 이끌었고, 이러한 사회운동은 다시 대안적 공론장의 변화 발전으로 이어지고 있다는 것이다.

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산업사회, 대중문화, 도시에 대한 '현실과 발언'의 양가적 태도 (Ambivalence in "Hy$\breve{o}$nsil kwa Par$\breve{o}$n"'s Relationsip to Industrial Society, Mass Culture, and the City)

  • 신정훈
    • 미술이론과 현장
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    • 제16호
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    • pp.41-69
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    • 2013
  • The inauguration of the collective Reality and Utterance (Hy$\breve{o}$nsil kwa Par$\breve{o}$n) in 1979 and 1980 marked a watershed moment in Korean art. This is not only because the collective gave birth to the politically-engaged art movement that would come to be labeled "Minjung Art" by the middle of the 80s, but also because it enthusiastically embraced a wide range of images from the urban culture. With a special focus on the members' early work, my research explores an issue largely neglected in the dominant narrative of Minjung art as a form of activism against the authoritarian Korean government during the 80s. The issue is what was at stake in Reality and Utterance's exploration of contemporary urban visual culture. The aim of this essay is to recognize the engagement with the urban visual culture as central to the group's early project and to consider it at some distance from the anti-urban and anti-mass culture perspective which was endorsed by the Minjung narrative. Focusing on members' turn to urban visual culture, this essay instead argues that this turn was by no means merely a means to making art as social critique, but more importantly, it was an experiment with the shared image world, as opposed to the rarefied visual vocabularies of abstract modernism. Visual productions such as advertisements, billboards, posters, and kitsch paintings, which come from outside the narrow confines of fine art, were definitely ominous signs of the colonization of everyday life in the capitalist city, but at the same time they were anticipated to be a catalyst for redefining Korean art in a more communicative, accessible, and democratized way. In this regard, in the early 1980s-in particular 1980 and 1982-the members' gesture oscillated between critique and embrace, which allowed the group to occupy a unique domain in the realm of Korean art production.

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