The Korea Times

Anthropolo­gist traces ‘haunted’ sites in Seoul

- By Peter Juhl PJuhl026@gmail.com Peter Juhl holds an MA from Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced Internatio­nal Studies with a concentrat­ion in Korea Studies and has most recently worked at a think tank in Washington, D.C.

Halloween is not traditiona­lly celebrated in Korea, although the elements are in place, from the availabili­ty of pumpkins and other gourds and a love of costumes and candy, to the widespread belief in ghosts and demons. A higher proportion of Koreans believe in the supernatur­al (up to 51 percent in Gallup polls) compared to Americans (32 percent) and Canadians (25 percent). The belief in the paranormal is nearly ubiquitous across Korea, due to a unique combinatio­n of cultural and historic factors.

Various types of spirits and monsters are thought to inhabit different specific sites, including burial sites and areas “associated with historical trauma,” according to Jennifer Flinn, a lecturer at Kyung Hee University and an East Asian Studies scholar with expertise on the subject.

Flinn has been leading walking tours of Seoul’s spooky side for years, but this weekend she offers her “Spooky Seoul” tour to everyone through the Royal Asiatic

Society Korea Branch (RASKB). She will bring participan­ts to sites associated with supernatur­al stories and legends in the Sinchon, Seodaemun, Gyeonghui Palace and

Cheonggye Stream areas.

Flinn, an American, is an anthropolo­gist by training and brings a scholar’s perspectiv­e to the subject rather than a sensationa­list one. She characteri­zes her aim with the “Spooky Seoul” tour as “placing different areas and events associated with Korea’s ghost stories in a sociocultu­ral context.” Her tour covers “historical events and topics by going backwards in time from recent events to the beginning of the Joseon era, and weaves in folklore.”

Flinn first came into contact with this country’s ghost stories in the late 1990s, while here as an exchange student. She has since gained considerab­le knowledge not only on specific stories and legends but also on people’s underlying beliefs and attitudes towards the supernatur­al.

Regarding the role of religion in Korean supernatur­alism, while “all the major religions in Korea have spaces for spirits,” Flinn said, “their roles vary considerab­ly.” She adds that these beliefs are always “tempered by folk ideas about ghosts and individual experience­s.”

She plans to share tales and legends, both horrifying and humorous, dating from Seoul’s distant past to the present day. She will touch on supernatur­al folklore including Seoul’s geomantic layout and its relationsh­ip with the surroundin­g mountains, as well as looking into more historical­ly veracious events, shedding light on some of the most tragic chapters of Korea’s modern history.

Attending costs 28,000 won ($25), or 23,000 won for RASKB members. Visit raskb.com for more informatio­n and to sign up.

 ?? Courtesy of RASKB ?? A tour group visits Gyeonghui Palace.
Courtesy of RASKB A tour group visits Gyeonghui Palace.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Korea, Republic