• 제목/요약/키워드: Contemporary people

검색결과 475건 처리시간 0.025초

금전(金錢)을 매개(媒介)로 한 사설시조(辭說時調)의 성담론(性談論) (A study on the Pecuniary mediated Sexual Discussion in Saseol Sijo)

  • 류해춘
    • 한국시조학회지:시조학논총
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    • 제25집
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    • pp.29-48
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    • 2006
  • 인간의 삶을 반영하고 있는 사설시조에서는 애정과 관련된 재화(財貨)나 금전(金錢)이 등장하여 그 당대 사람들의 애정과 경제의 상관성을 보여주는 경우가 종종 있다. 주부란 한 가정을 이루며 살고 있는 가장의 아내로서 여성을 의미하는 말이라고 할 수 있다. 사설시조에 나타난 물질문제나 금전문제는 물질적 궁핍을 강요하는 사회와의 투쟁이 드러나지 않고 오락성이나 유흥성의 측면에서 재화나 금전의 과소비를 추구하고 있다고 할 수 있다. 이때 나타난 사설시조의 성담론은 여성의 성적억압을 상상적으로 해소하기 위한 욕망의 투사체이거나 혹은 대리 만족으로 여성의 성적 욕망을 다루었다고 보아야 할 것이다. 조선후기 우리 사회의 풍류방이나 유흥의 산물로 흥행한 사설시조에 담겨있는 주부의 모습은 유교적 질서가 확고했던 조선시대에도 여성이 가정 내에서 그 역할이 점차 변해가고 있었으며 현대 사회의 주부들 못지 않게 자유롭고 발랄한 성담론을 구사하고 있었다. 사설시조에 나타난 금전을 매개로 한 주부들의 성담론이라는 주제는 현재 무너져 가는 가족관계와 천민자본주의 그리고 성(性) 산업의 노예가 되고 있는 21세기 현대인들에게 많은 시사점을 준다고 할 수 있다

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서울 다이나믹스 - 청계천 시점부 광장 설계 - (Seoul Dynamics - Cheonggyecheon Threshold Plaza Design -)

  • 김정윤;오피스 박김
    • 한국조경학회지
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    • 제34권1호
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    • pp.92-106
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    • 2006
  • The process of designing Cheonggyecheon Entrance Plaza began with researching four keywords: plaza, restoration. modernity and icon. The outcome of the research was reinterpreted into and informed the design. An urban plaza must not only be a stage for civic life but should also be a portrait of the city to which it belongs. Many Korean plazas, however, are treated as if they are parks. Yeouido Park, which was originally a vast urban void, and Seoul Plaza, recently paved with grass, are good example. The strong 'green myth' can hinder socio-political activities. Cheonggyecheon cannot be said to have been 'restored', since it is still disconnected from its origin and upper streams, and the water is circulated by electricity. So it is better understood as an artificial urban waterfront, rather than an ecologically restored stream. This fact might diminish its ecological value, but not its recreational one. The entrance plaza therefore should reflect that the new stream brings back an 'experience', not only water itself. At the same time, the catch phrase of this restoration project was 'post-modern'. The demolished Cheonggye Expressway represents the 'economy drive' of the 1970s, so the newly opened Cheonggyecheon serves as a perfect counterpart to it. But modernity in Korea is the spirit that made many of the good things, not only its shortcomings, we have now. And from the philosophy of this restoration project, we can see that it is still an ongoing attitude in a way. Remnant of Cheonggye Expressway can evoke our nostalgia for the era. There are plenty of symbols in Seoul, both as architecture and objects. But none of them provide citizens with experience, other than the experience of looking at them. Cheonggyecheon Entrance Plaza is a good place to serve as an icon for a dynamic Seoul. From the research, the designer concluded that this plaza should commemorate the incomparable horizontal experience of Cheonggyecheon and the old expressway, amid the vertical metropolis. The Pedestrian Sculpture, which people can stroll on and look out over Cheonggyecheon, is to be made of steel cladding with a core structure and represents the dynamism of the stream, Seoul and contemporary Korea. The choice of material and the steel structure are also ways of creating the icon. The Water Plaza, the space underneath the ramp, will accommodate people and their urban activities, providing an opportunity to play with water. The Waterblades will be a device for the dramatic beginning of the stream, simultaneously camouflaging ugly openings in the outlets. The Wall of Archaeology is to be made with pre-fab resin blocks, translucent enough so that people can see through any archaeological findings of the site. The strong water-resistant character of resin makes the wall steady throughout the flood season as well. Cheonggyecheon restoration project is an effort to combine contemporary urban demand with the once-existing physicality by evoking our nostalgia for it. The project itself shows many socio-political issues of present-day Korea. The entrance plaza design thus is focused on suggesting an icon for the metropolis, simultaneously celebrating the stream itself. Within this space, people will be exposed to a unique experience that any 'green myth' cannot offer.

The Meaning of Death for Korean in View of Novel and End Stage Cancer Patient

  • 전혜원
    • 한국호스피스완화의료학회:학술대회논문집
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    • 한국호스피스완화의료학회 2004년도 정기총회 및 하계학술대회
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    • pp.103-105
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    • 2004
  • Every one experiences death one day, however no one can hows exactly what it is because people can not experience death until it comes, it is therefore impossible to judge correctly on the phenomenon of the death. On the whole, man experiences indirect death through the mass communications such as TV drama, fiction, magazine etc because those methods can easily access by every one. In addition to this, people usually acquire the negative awareness of death through the dramatic change of story like dying of cancer for dramatic effect by giving scare and fear to the cancers. The purpose of this study is to provide basic information on the spiritual care that enables the facing death patients to accept death as a part of life and divert hope from scare about after death by comparing and analyzing of two aspects of death meaning i.e, Korean fiction and the end stage cancer patients. Additionally, for medical staff to understand the facing death cancer patients by making to aware patients correctly and provide the better quality of care. The study was performed from September 28, 2002 to February, 28, 2003. The materials of this study were collected by direct data obtained from observation, interviews, note and diary of end stage of cancer patients and written materials acquired from Korean contemporary fiction. Participants of this study were 4 end stage cancer patients including 2 lung cancer patients, 1 liver cancer patient and 1 esophagus cancer patient. The methodology used in this study was divided into two types; Huberman & Miles methodology was used for fiction to find and categorize subject, and Colaizzi, one of phenomenological methodology was used for end stage cancer patients to find the major meaning, subject and categorization. Every one experiences death one day, however no one can knows exactly what it is because people ran not experience death until it comes, it is therefore impossible to judge correctly on the phenomenon of the death. On the whole, man experiences indirect death through the mass communications such as TV drama, fiction, magazine etc because those methods can easily access by every one. In addition to this, people usually acquire the negative awareness of death through the dramatic change of story like dying of cancer for dramatic effect by giving scare and fear to the cancers. The purpose of this study is to provide basic information on the spiritual care that enables the facing death patients to accept death as a part of life and divert hope from scare about after death by comparing and analyzing of two aspects of death meaning i.e, Korean fiction and the end stage cancer patients. Additionally, for medical staff to understand the facing death cancer patients by making to aware patients correctly and provide the better quality of care. The study was performed from September 28, 2002 to February, 28 2003. The materials of this study were collected by direct data obtained from observation, interviews, note and diary of end stage of cancer patients and written materials acquired from Korean contemporary fiction. Participants of this study were 4 end stage cancer patients including 2 lung lancer patients, 1 liver cancer patient and 1 esophagus cancer patient. The methodology used in this study was divided into two types; Huberman & Miles methodology was used for fiction to find and categorize subject, and Colaizzi, one of phenomenological methodology was used for end stage cancer patients to find the major meaning, subject and categorization.

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A Declaration of Love all the Same: Chicago and Modern Boy

  • Lee, Yujung
    • 비교문화연구
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    • 제20권
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    • pp.241-274
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    • 2010
  • Due to the remarkable changes in the early twentieth century, the new invention and technology impacted peoples' everyday lives and people started to use the word, modern, to apply specifically to what pertained to present times and to designate a movement in what was new and not old-fashioned-a condition of newness. In the present day, however, the fantastic cultural changes of a century ago have now become commonplace, and what was once considered radically new is no longer a reason to marvel. This paper considers what it mean to be modern, once the new is no longer new. This question seems to remain as complicated and inappropriate to ponder because the consideration and impact of modernity cannot simply end with the end of an era. This paper investigates how the interconnected nature of popular culture provides apt illustrations to reveal the ambivalent nature of modernity and postmodernity. In doing so, first of all, this paper pays attentions to the notion of modernity and popular culture which emerged together in the early twentieth century when technology and mass consumer culture were promoted over the world. Also, it examines how popular culture represents a complex of mutually-interdependent perspectives and values that influence society and its institutions in various ways as the image of modernity continues to build in a postmodern era. That is, popular culture is identified as a large amount of intertextuality or collective experiences due to its intermingling of complementary distribution sources and techonology. Thus, this paper explores that popular culture devotes itself other images or narratives instead of referring to the real world and its output revisits the contemporary or past times in other places, being a means to produce and reproduce the accumulated images of the modern which shapes ceaseless simulacra of modernity over complexities of modernity. In order to find a critical juncture of the complex networks of modernity and popular culture, this paper considers two places, Chicago and Gyeongsung in the 1920s and 1930s in which the rapid modern experience took place and the modern movement forced the two societies to join the mass consumer culture whether willingly or not. Next, this paper considers two movies released in 2002 and 2008 that exemplify the complexities of modernity in Chicago and Gyeongung of the 1920s and 30s: Chicago and Modern Boy. Both films have common themes of the 1920s and 30s such as violence, adultery, femme fatal, and criminal themes with the forms of musical, dance, drama, and romance. Through the textual analysis of both Chicago and Modern Boy, two films are compared in observing the similar and different ways in which two films deal with the theme of modernity when they are represented from the contemporary perspectives. More specifically, this paper questions how modernity is present in contemporary cultural forms such as commercial and hybrid genre films; and how these movies create a new image of modern by embodying the double coding. Ultimately, this paper aims at realizing the paradox of double edged modernity and its ongoing discourse that controls people's consciousness through the medium of popular culture.

20세기 초 영화에 나타난 근대인의 공간적 실천 분석 연구 (An Analysis of Spactial Practice of Morden People appeared in the early 20th century film)

  • 이영수;노은주
    • 한국실내디자인학회논문집
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    • 제20권6호
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    • pp.124-134
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    • 2011
  • The space has been interpreted from various perspectives, such as hierarchical, cultural, economic, political factors, etc. So we can see the space as a social existence. Space is now being formed through the dialectical relations of these elements. From this point of view, this study started to research the spatial practice of morden people through the case in the early 20th century film. With the discourse of Henri Lefebvre and David Harvey, and Michel de Certeau's theory, this research tried to find the mechanisms of spatial practice. Also Benjamin is a philosopher who intervenes the relationship between modernity and cultural production and his way of reading cultural phenomena seems to serve as the useful methodology of cultural studies. Modern people were individual unawared of the era, awakened to the ego. They were wandering the room and the street, private and public places. They were city dwellers walking around, collecting goods, and living of everyday life. Spatial practice is a fixed activity and have continuity. spatial practice appeared in the early 20th century film is at the intersection of social practices and the practice of everyday life. Social practices are a fixed practice and continuous practice. The practices of everyday life are nomadic practice and amusable practice. Modern people accommodate and adapt to a given space of the city through fixed practice. They realizes the access and the distance from spaces through continuous practice. They select and approved the spaces through nomadic practice. And they possess exclusively and utilize the spaces through amusable practice. Through These research spatial practices, it could easily found similarities and differences between modern space on the early 20th century and contemporary space of 21st century. True modern is not the past but the present.

조선후기 풍속화에 나타난 민간의 생활유형별 복식문화와 사회상 - 단원 김홍도의 《풍속화첩》을 중심으로 - (Costume Culture and Customs of Ordinary People Appearing in Genre Painting During the Late Chosun Dynasty - focusing on Danwon Kim Hong-do's Pungsokhwachop -)

  • 양숙향;김나형
    • 한국지역사회생활과학회지
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    • 제15권1호
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    • pp.17-26
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    • 2004
  • Not much is known about Korean clothes from past centuries. Fortunately, we are able to make some inferences based on various sources of data other than the actual clothes themselves. Historical records such as Kim Hong-do's Pungsokhwa Pieces, well known to us, vividly depict features of the costume and the lifestyle of his time along with contemporary Korean humor and atmosphere. Kim Hong-do is the artist who, having accomplished pictorial refinement, recognized social change and took this into his artistic world late in the 18th century. The ruling classes, in contrast, tended to adhere to anachronistic medieval philosophies in a gradually changing society. In this study, Kim Hong-do's Pungsokhwachop, Treasure No. 527, preserved in the National Museum of Korea, was viewed from a new perspective, and it was discovered to have assorted the costume and culture of ordinary people according to their life styles. Fourteen of the pieces depicted how common citizens made their living, three described love affairs, five depicted people at play, md the rest showed elements of education, wedding ceremonies, and shamanism, respectively. Various types of clothing were observed reflecting the life styles of ordinary people, and a somewhat bold exposure of body was noticed in women's fashion in the late Chosun Dynasty. They chose clothing as they pleased to fit their jobs and functions, which produced elegant self-regulation and creativity based on practical beauty. A hat - yet to be found as a relic - appeared in Blacksmith's Workshop, and revealed the changing social customs of the late Chosun Dynasty in the 18th century. It is hoped that the results of this study will serve as a valuable reference point for the globalization of Korean clothes.

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문화원형을 기반으로 한 창의적 캐릭터 제안 한국 고전 설화 <불가살이(不可殺伊)>를 중심으로 (Suggestion of a Creative Character based on Cultural Archetype -focused on , Korean Classic Folktales-)

  • 신상기;이채론
    • 한국콘텐츠학회논문지
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    • 제13권11호
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    • pp.451-460
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    • 2013
  • 문화원형을 창작소재로 다루어 현대적으로 개발하는 사업이 꾸준히 추진되어 왔다. 하지만 문화원형을 단순히 재현하고 현대매체로 전이시키는 작업을 벗어나 현 시대를 살고 있는 수신자 즉, 대중들이 원하는 욕망을 통찰하고 있지 않은 콘텐츠 개발은 무의미 하다. 과거 사람들이 욕망하던 것들과 현대인들의 욕망은 완벽히 일치될 수 없기 때문이다. 본 연구는 한국의 문화원형으로 존재하는 '불가살이(不可殺伊)'를 현대에 알맞은 문화콘텐츠로 컨버전스하기 위해 시작되었다. 종래의 '불가살이'에 대한 근거를 바탕으로 창의적 캐릭터를 개발하기 위해 고전의 현대적 변용의 방법과 의의, 그리고 캐릭터가 가지고 있는 경제적 가치와 향후 개발의 방향성을 알아보기 위한 사례들을 살펴보았다. 한국의 문화원형인 '불가살이(不可殺伊)'는 한국형 몬스터로 당대 사람들의 소망을 투영시켜 반전과 영웅의 성격을 가지고 있으며, 쇠를 먹고 불과 연관된 특성은 '불가살이'만이 가진 독자적인 캐릭터다. 그것을 바탕으로 현대적 감각으로 재탄생된 '불가살이'는 쇠를 다루는 연장을 무기로 장착하고, 불과 싸우는 소방관의 이미지를 투영시켰다. 본 연구는 문화원형의 성공적인 현대적 변용을 위한 캐릭터 제안 뿐 아니라 캐릭터가 가진 가치를 새롭게 전개하리라 생각한다.

한국 전통음악의 전승과 미래 - 가야금산조를 중심으로 - (Transmission of Korean Traditional Music - Focusing of Solo Instrumental Music for the Gayageum (12-stringed Zither) -)

  • 이용식
    • 공연문화연구
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    • 제19호
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    • pp.281-315
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    • 2009
  • 20세기 초 일제강점기를 겪고 서양문화의 급격한 수입으로 인해 전통은 '과거의 진부한 유산'으로 취급받으면서 전통음악은 농경사회의 잔재 혹은 '기생문화'의 전형으로 여겨졌다. 이런 와중에 전통음악문화는 매우 빠른 속도로 붕괴되면서 피폐화되었다. 1960년대 이후 전통문화를 보호하기 위한 문화재보호법이 제정되면서 무형문화유산은 정부의 보호막에 들어갔다. 이후 많은 전통음악장르가 중요무형문화재로 지정되어 근근이 명맥을 유지하게 된다. 또한 많은 대학에 국악과가 설립되고, 국립국악원을 비롯한 각종 시립·도립 국악관현악단이 설립되면서 전통음악은 부활하고 있다. 그러나 제도권 음악계의 이런 변화는 우리의 전통음악문화의 전승방법과는 전혀 다른 것이다. 전통음악을 포함하는 무형문화유산은 살아있는 생명체이고, 전통음악은 이를 둘러싼 유기적인 환경이 바뀌면 외부환경의 영향으로 스스로 소멸되기도 하고 새로운 환경에 적응하기 위하여 끊임없이 변모하기 마련이다. 한번 창작되면 어느 정도의 고정성을 갖는 완성예술(product arts)인 서양예술음악과는 달리 한국 전통음악은 음악가의 손을 거치면서 시대적으로 끊임없이 새로운 모습으로 변화하는 과정예술(process arts)의 전형적인 형태를 보인다. 이것이 한국 전통음악의 생명력이었다. 일제강점기 이후 자생적 생명력을 소진한 전통음악은 해방 이후에는 외부의 동력에 힘입어 새로운 생명력을 얻게 되었다. 즉, 해방 이후의 전통음악문화는 기존의 음악문화와는 전혀 다른 경험을 통해 성장하고 있다. 이는 전통문화의 재창조·전승이라는 긍정적인 작용과 더불어 왜곡·박제화라는 부정적인 면도 공존하고 있는 실정이다. 이 글에서는 가야금산조를 중심으로 전통음악의 전승과 미래를 논의하고자 한다. 전통음악의 부침과 부활을 가장 극명하게 보여주는 것이 기악독주음악인 산조이다. 19세기 끝머리에 처음 만들어진 산조는 일제강점기에는 판소리의 전성시대에 힘입어 괄목할만한 성장을 이룬다. 그러나 해방 후에는 전통음악의 부침과 더불어 침체기를 겪다가 1960년대 이후 중요무형문화재와 대학 교육의 영향으로 부활하여 지금은 전통음악장르를 대표하는 음악으로 성장했다.

사람 재식별: 학제간 연구 과제 (People Re-identification: A Multidisciplinary Challenge)

  • 정동선
    • 한국인터넷방송통신학회논문지
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    • 제12권6호
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    • pp.135-139
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    • 2012
  • 인터넷의 확산과 정보 교환, 배포와 수집 기술에 대한 의존도의 증대로 과거와는 비교할 수 없는 대용량의 데이터가 생성되었다. 대용량 데이터를 식별하고 가려내는 작업은 가까운 미래에 오늘날의 컴퓨터 과학의 상당 부분을 새롭게 정의할 것으로 예상된다. 여러 관련 분야에서 반복되는 중요한 과제는 재식별의 문제이다. 광범위한 정의에서, 재식별 문제는 과거에 인식된 객체를 다시 식별하는 문제이다. 예를 들면, 여러 장소에 설치된 감시 카메라에 포착된 어떤 사람을 추적하는 문제가 이에 해당한다. 본 논문에서는 서로 다른 분야에서 이 과제를 어떻게 정의하고, 이 과제를 어떻게 해결하는가에 대해 비교 분석한다. 비디오 감시에서 사람 재식별, 텍스트 샘플에서 저자 식별, 사진 선호도에 따른 사용자 식별 등이 이에 포함된다. 본 논문은 또한 학제간 해결 방안이 장점을 지니는 상황에 대한 비전을 제시한다.

Molding the East Asian Dragons: The Creation and Transformation of Various Ecological and Political Discourses

  • NGUYEN Ngoc Tho;PHAN Thi Thu Hien
    • 대순사상과 동아시아종교
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    • 제2권2호
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    • pp.73-99
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    • 2023
  • The dragon is a special imaginary figure created by the people of East Asia. Its archetypes appeared primarily as totemic symbols of different tribes and groups in the region. The formation of early dynasties probably generated the molding of the dragon symbol. Dragon symbols carried deep imprints of nature. They concealed alternative messages of how ancient people at different locations dealt with or interacted with nature. Under pressure to standardize in the medieval and late imperial periods, the popular dragon had to transform physically and ideologically. It became imposed, unified, and framed, conveying ideas of caste classification and power, and losing itsecological implications. The dragon transitioned from a semi-ecological domain into a total social caste system. However, many people considered the "standardized" dragon as the symbol of the oppressor. Because of continuous orthopraxy and calls for imperial reverence, especially under orthopractic agenda and the surveillance of local elites, the popularized dragon was imbued within local artworks or hidden under the sanctity of Buddhas or popular gods in order to survive. Through disguise, the popular dragon partially maintained its ecological narratives. When the imperial dynasties ended in East Asia (1910 in Korea, 1911 in China, 1945 in Vietnam), the dragon was dramatically decentralized. However, trends of re-standardization and re-centralization have emerged recently in China, as the country rises in the global arena. In this newly-emerging "re-orthopraxy", the dragon has been superimposed with a more externally political discourse ("soft power" in international relations) rather than the old-style standardization for internal centralization in the late imperial period. In the contemporary world, science and technology have advanced humanity's ability to improve the world; however, it seems that people have abused science and technology to control nature, consequently damaging the environment (pollution, global warming, etc.). The dragon symbol needs to be re-defined, "re-molded", re-evaluated and reinterpreted accordingly, especially under the newly-emerging lens-the New Confucian "anthropocosmic" view.