Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional customs - Korean traditional culture 600 words

Korean traditional culture 600 words

I have been exposed to Korean for three semesters. During this period, I experienced the process from sensory cognition to actual contact with Korean, Korean culture and Koreans, and also experienced the complex psychological process from cognition to understanding to judgment. In these three semesters, I not only learned Korean, but also learned about various Korean cultures. During my study, I gradually found that Korean culture is also very rich, so I want to take this opportunity of social practice to learn more about Korean culture.

I have always been interested in the Korean flag. Before I went to college, I saw from various news and sports events that there were many China elements in the Korean national flag. As China people, we don't know these elements, such as Tai Chi and Eight Diagrams. In addition, in 2005, South Korea's "Dragon Boat Festival Heritage Application" was successful, which caused quite a stir in China. These sometimes even make me feel that Koreans seem to know more about our traditional culture in China than we do in China. "National disaster" was a word that came to my mind at that time. "Now we can't even inherit the traditional culture that China is most proud of. What do we have left? " That's what I thought at the time. After coming to the university, there was a big Korean flag behind the professional classroom that accompanied us for three semesters, which further continued my curiosity about it. What kind of feelings does this national flag full of China elements contain for the Korean people? This is also the question I asked to study in this practice report.

Only after learning Korean did I know that the national flag of South Korea is called Taiji Flag (? )。 I remember reading the Book of Changes, which was taught by Professor Ceng Shiqiang in Lecture Room, and I got to know a little bit about the Book of Changes. I can hardly recognize the four hexagrams on the four corners of the North Korean flag as Tiangan, Dikun, Holly and Shuikan. But the specific meaning cannot be understood too deeply. During these three semesters in college, I also met some Korean friends because of my professional needs. Most of them came to China as international students. They are the objects of my social practice this time. For this actual combat report, I threw them such a question, "How much do you know about Taiji Banner?" In the end, the answers they gave were very simple, probably descriptive words such as "There is a garden on a white background with black horizontal lines at the four corners". The best answer is only "the red and blue colors in the circle represent yin and yang, and the white background represents purity ()". After hearing these answers, I think my previous idea of "national crisis" is superfluous, but on second thought, as college students in China, how many of us can tell the meaning of our five-star red flag? Four little stars surround a big star. Not many people will know what those four little stars stand for and what a big star stands for. So those Korean friends don't know that this should be reasonable.