The ideology of kinship established the foundation for the social and political spheres of Chosŏn life-influencing the everyday choices and actions of the people, including the king. Thus, learning about kinship helps us in the modern world understand the motives and actions of the people living during the Chosŏn era. But what is kinship? Ksenia Chizhova’s Kinship Novels of Early Modern Korea: Between Genealogical Time and the Domestic Everyday (Princeton University Press, 2021) gives us a look into the origin and impact of kinship in Chosŏn through kinship novels. In early Chosŏn, the kinship system was brought along with the introduction of Neo-Confucian ideas and “embodied a moral, state-endorsed vision of idealized human bonds” (Chizhova, 5). A person who understands their role in familial relationships develops both domestic harmony and lays the foundation for their role in society. For example, the relationship between father and son sets up the relationship between ruler and subject.
As described by Ksenia Chizhova, kinship novels, or vernacular Korean lineage novels, “elaborate the intricacies of the kinship system of late Chosŏn Korea” (Chizhova 2). They are aptly named so for being novels written in vernacular Korean by elite women, which often circulate within a family or lineage. Although each novel is unique, they follow a common pattern: they open up with the hereditary moral excellence of the lineage members, the patriarch plays a minor yet important role, and the stories often revolve around kinship norms.
The novels state the lineage’s moral excellence because a person’s lineage played an important role in Chosŏn society. Chosŏn was a low social mobility society. Belonging to a strong and prestigious lineage granted high social status, which enabled an individual to obtain high-ranking jobs and better prospective partners.
Meanwhile, the patriarch, who represents the identity of the lineage, is never the protagonist of the novel. Instead, he acts as a representation of ancestral virtues and a guiding figure for the protagonist who is usually a young person who struggles to conform to kinship norms while harboring unruly, selfish feelings. These unruly, selfish feelings threaten the harmony created by the kinship system and the protagonist must learn to balance these personal feelings and the social order to protect the harmony.
Marriage and Desire in Kinship Novels
Brothers Hyŏn
This comic follows the lineage novel, Brothers Hyŏn, the first novel in a kinship trilogy of the Hyŏn lineage. The trilogy’s central theme is desire and marriage. Brothers Hyŏn follows two brothers, Hyŏn Sumun and Hyŏn Kyŏngmun, who are on opposite spectrums of desire. Sumun is described as “the quintessence of virility and lust” while Kyŏngmun focuses on his work as a scholar and is “uninterested in the affairs of the bedchamber” (Chizhova, 131). This comic follows Sumun and his wife, Yun Hyebing. Sumun rapes Hyebing to consummate their marriage. After the traumatic event, Hyebing initially tries to escape, but because she and Sumun already had sex, both her own parents and her in-laws see her as belonging to Sumun and push her to exemplify the female virtue of obedience towards the husband. This story is an example of how kinship novels deal with the consequences of unruly emotions. Although Hyebing’s suffering is acknowledged and Sumun’s transgression is recognized, ultimately the social and human problems of unruly emotions are resolved through a reaffirmation of kinship in this story.
A Woman’s Role
The relationship between husband and wife is one of the three fundamental Confucian moral bonds. Marriage signified the passing of the woman’s subservience from her father to her husband. In the end, Hyebing must submit herself to her husband to uphold kinship norms. Following the rules of patriarchal lineage, Hyebing married Sumun and must now follow her father-in-law and her husband. Hyebing’s actualization of the role of the wife brings back the domestic harmony of the kinship system.
Images
Documents
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Brother Hyun, The Comic | pdf / 51.98 MB | Download |