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Cited 7 time in webofscience Cited 6 time in scopus
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The Choson Gentry Sponsorship of Buddhist Temple Works: Insights from the Records of Late-Choson Donor Ledgers

Authors
Kim, Sung-Eun Thomas
Issue Date
Oct-2020
Publisher
INST STUDY RELIGION, SOGANG UNIV
Keywords
Choson Buddhism; temple works; donor ledger; nectar ritual paintings; Buddhist memorial steles; socio-political elites; Confucianization; temple culture
Citation
JOURNAL OF KOREAN RELIGIONS, v.11, no.2, pp 45 - 73
Pages
29
Indexed
AHCI
SCOPUS
KCI
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF KOREAN RELIGIONS
Volume
11
Number
2
Start Page
45
End Page
73
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/24749
DOI
10.1353/jkr.2020.0012
ISSN
2093-7288
2167-2040
Abstract
Much has been written about the Choson scholar-officials and the gentry but very little is known about their private affairs, such as their religious activities. To date, socio-political elite males of the Choson period are accepted to have been averse to heterodox traditions, especially heterodox rituals. Despite the overall lack of research on their private lives, it seems this group of men did leave behind clear records of their activities and involvement with Buddhist temples. Indeed, these Choson elites took part in Buddhist events and temple works more than has been realized. This article focuses on the donor ledgers for temple works, which reveal a trove of evidence of the intimate relationship that existed in the Choson period between the Buddhist temples and wealthy gentry women and men. Not much different from the Koryo period, during the succeeding Choson period sponsorship by the wealthy and powerful was a lifeline for Buddhism. Despite the five centuries under Confucian rule and anti-Buddhist state policies, during the Choson dynasty the monastic community was able to continue its relationship not only with the masses but also with the socio-political elites. We are aware that beyond the polemical relationship between the Confucian elite and Buddhism, there existed a cultural framework where Buddhism provided to the societal elites not only religious meaning, but socio-cultural significance, practices, and identity.
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