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Board: Bom yeoreum gaeul gyeoul geurigo bom (2003)




Subject Posted by Date    
SYMBOLISM AND MEANING
  by rupertbreheny (Wed Apr 28 2004 15:36:38)
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At the risk of boring you all senseless here are some observations off the top of my head.

THE HUT
Representing the self. All the posessions and shelter needed is on the floating hut. When the young man can no longer live at peace and comfort in the hut then bad things transpire. He never commits lustful acts in the hut. When we seek happiness outside ourselves, we are never truly content.

THE DOORS
The doors by the lakeside and in the hut are symbolic rather than prescriptive. The fact there are no walls means their use is not forced but elected. They represent morality and discipline. Morality is not defined by a higher power but by society and the self. By adopting the constraints the doors engender, self-discipline is attained. As soon as the young man transgresses these self-imposed boundaries, to sneak across to the young woman, then disaster follows.

THE DEAD ANIMALS
The Master allows the young boy to let the animals die. He does not become an all powerful father figure, cleaning up after him, but allows him to make mistakes and suffer the consequences. Buddhism does not have a higher power but rather promotes self-awareness.

THE MILLSTONE AND BUDDHA
Represent the twin stones of regret for killing the fish and the snake. What you do unto others, you do unto yourself. He has carried that karma around with him all his life until he transcends them both, carrying them to the top of the hill, near heaven. Here he cuts himself free and attains redemption through struggle.

THE MASTER
Is a great teacher, but does not lecture. Hardly a word is spoken, but lessons are learned. A good teacher points the way for a student to discover self-evident knowledge for themselves.

THE MOTHER
The veil, representing guilt and shame are ultimately the cause of her downfall. Hiding from the outside world can bring about ruin.

THE YOUNG BOY
Both at the beggining and the end, represents us. A good life is attained not by the absence of bad thoughts, but rather by their mastery, so they have no hold over us. We choose our behaviour rather than it choose us. The new boy is not born without sin, but rather must walk his own path to divinity. The same actor playing the young boy show the eternal cycle of the human soul.


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Re: SYMBOLISM AND MEANING mikeycmikeydo   (Fri May 7 2004 14:38:08)
Re: SYMBOLISM AND MEANING samanthaleehk   (Mon May 10 2004 07:01:45)
Re: SYMBOLISM AND MEANING rupertbreheny   (Mon May 10 2004 08:14:28)
Re: SYMBOLISM AND MEANING chbrunne   (Tue May 18 2004 19:46:20)
Re: SYMBOLISM AND MEANING rupertbreheny   (Wed May 19 2004 04:39:18)
[Post deleted] Deleted
Re: SYMBOLISM AND MEANING cjncrky   (Sat May 22 2004 16:46:05)
Re: SYMBOLISM AND MEANING janus3   (Wed May 26 2004 01:52:34)
Re: SYMBOLISM AND MEANING ngotch   (Tue May 25 2004 05:15:36)



 
 


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