@article{oai:minpaku.repo.nii.ac.jp:00004506, author = {重松, 真由美 and Shigematsu, Mayumi}, issue = {2}, journal = {国立民族学博物館研究報告, Bulletin of the National Museum of Ethnology}, month = {Oct}, note = {Shamanism in the greater Korean culture area has a long and complex history. However, there is little historical literature on the content of Korean shamanism, which appears to be suggestive of the nature of the subject. This article provides data on kut, the major ritual of Korean shamans, and describes one of several kut that I observed during the course of seventeen months field research in a village of Kyonggi Province. Through a socially defined process of feeding and giving pleasure to spirits and ancestors, the rituals of kut engage them in a temporary alliance with the living villagers. The chinogzvi-kudt escribed here was held on the death of Mr. S on December 7, 1979. It lasted sixteen hours, beginning at five in the evening, and was performed by mansin (the polite term of address for a shaman in Kyonggi Province). The ritual is a complex interplay between a client (Mrs. S), her family and relatives, villagers, mansin, and ancestors and spirits. Analysis of kut is useful in elucidating the Korean view of death, the interplay between the worlds of the living and the dead, and the role of ancestors and spirits.}, pages = {256--282}, title = {チノギ賽神における祖上と神霊 : 韓国京畿道楊州郡K洞の事例}, volume = {6}, year = {1981}, yomi = {シゲマツ, マユミ} }