Korean Studies

The Korean Myths

A Guide to the Gods, Heroes and Legends

Authors:Fenkl, Heinz Insu und Dalton-Fenkl, Bella Myong-wol
Published:2024
Call Number:GR342 2024/1

The myths of Korea may seem a complex and intriguing mix of ghosts, spirits, and superstition, but they form the bedrock of one of the most vibrant global cultures today. In the past few decades, South Korea has experienced a rapid rise to prominence on the world stage as the Hallyu, the “Korean wave” of popular culture, drives newfound interest in the country. This swift transformation has also generated paradoxes within contemporary South Korea, where cutting-edge technology now coexists with centuries-old shamanistic legends and Buddhist rituals.

 

Korean myths are a living and evolving part of society, in both the North and South. With the export of Korean film across the globe, K-pop, fashion, K-dramas, literature, and comics there is a growing desire to understand the folklore and mythical underpinnings of contemporary Korean culture. Authors Heinz Insu Fenkl and Bella Dalton-Fenkl bring together a wealth of knowledge of both the new and the old, the traditional and the modern, to guide readers through this fascinating history and help them understand the culture and traditions of the Korean people. From the Changsega (“Song of Creation”) sung by shamans to the gods, goddesses, and monsters who inhabit the cosmos—including the god Mireuk, creator of the world, and the giant Grandma Mago, who was able to create mountains from the mud on her skirt—these myths have been disseminated for centuries and continue to resonate in popular culture today.

 

Thames and Hudson

 

 


 


Archive

October 2025

Titel:Among Women across Worlds : North Korea in the Global Cold War
Autorin:Suzy Kim
Erscheinungsjahr 2023
SignaturHQ1765.6 2023/1
E-Bookhttps://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/94185

“Moving beyond - and heavily critical of - the still common view of treating civic activities from North Korea as political theater, Among Women Across Worlds is a recovery of (and a tribute to) the history of socialist women’s contributions to peace and anti-imperial movement in the second half of the 20th century. A crucial way the book accomplishes this is by discussing how maternalism, feminism, and socialism converged to bring about a radical politics in which motherhood, now a matter of both public and private domains, became a collective political issue just as consequential as productive labor. 

[…]

Suzy Kim’s craft as a historian is at its apex in Among Women Across Worlds. Kim’s prose is bold, and every part of the book seems to have been thoughtfully designed and placed. The book has stunning images (all thirty-five of them), highly relevant texts-within-texts displaying primary documents, and wonderful satirical cartoons.”


- Review by Cheehyung Harrison Kim in Korea Journal (vol.64, no.1, pp.222 - 226)

 

 


 

Alltagsgeschichte in Koreastudien

Translated title:Everyday History in Korean Studies
Editors:Lee, You Jae and Jung, Byung Wook
Released:2025
Call number:D13 2025/1