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자연과학
공학
의약학
농수해양학
예술체육학
복합학
지원사업
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논문 기본 정보
- 자료유형
- 학술저널
- 저자정보
- 발행연도
- 2007.3
- 수록면
- 31 - 54 (24page)
이용수
초록· 키워드
The aim of this article is to interpret some aspects of Haenyeos (Jamnyeo or Jamsu)1 and their life and culture as a whole from the islanders’ perspective. Politically, they organized voluntary associations, called Jamsuhoi, that decided local village issues through democratic voting and decision-making. Through their power, they were able to maintain a four-month long uprising (January-April, 1932) against Japanese Imperialism’s illegal management of marine products of their sea villages. Economically, they were able to support their households to educate their family members through income gained by selling products to markets. Since 1895, the Haenyeos regularly went abroad seasonally, to earn money at sea in such regions as China, Japan and the Korean peninsula. Culturally they also created and developed their own folklore, traditional rituals, and festivals that commemorate their hard work and wandering, Gypsy-like lifestyle in the deep sea, differing slightly in mode from Korean p’ansori music. The Haenyeos also have a gender component that contributed to developing the potentials of the Jeju Island family value system as an integrated family model by the combination of big and nexus family systems in their homes. This paper argues the Jeju Haenyeos serve as an example of equitable gender roles in small island societies, different from or beyond the scope of traditional Korean Confucian stereotypes, and which have contributed to their village and island politically, economically, and culturally as a whole.
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목차
- Abstract
- Introduction
- Jeju Women as an Exceptional Case in Korean Confucian Culture
- The Political, Economic, and Cultural Values and Contribution of Jeju Haenyeos
- Some Applicable Principles to Modern Gender Roles
- Conclusion: Towards Positive Dreams in the Midst of Pessimistic Scenarios of Korean Gender Roles
- Appendix
- References