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This item is a print on demand title and will be dispatched in 1-3 weeks.

Paperback / softback

£18.00

Publisher: Cambridge University Press
ISBN: 9781009614757
Number of Pages: 78
Published: 25/09/2025
Korea has an unusually diverse religious culture. In the north, Juche, which has taken on religious overtones, monopolizes articulations of beliefs and values as well as ritual practice. In the south, no single religion dominates, with over half saying that they have no specific religious affiliation. The remainder report being Protestant, Buddhist, and Catholic. Smaller in number but nonetheless noticeable are members of Korea's many home-grown new religious movements. Reflecting South Korea's religious diversity, some of those new religions have Buddhist roots, some have Christian origins, some draw on Confucian beliefs and practices, and some have emerged from Indigenous religious traditions such as shamanism. This Element examines the most noticeable of Korea's new religions to discover what they can tell us about distinctive traits of religion in Korea, and how Koreans have responded to the challenge posed by modernity to their traditional beliefs and values.
1. Introduction; 2. Ch'ondogyo: the oldest new religion; 3. Won Buddhism; 4. Confucianism and new religions; 5. Christianity and new religions; 6. Indigenous gods of the new religions; 7. Religions and the state; 8. North Korea and Juche; 9. Conclusion; References.

Don Baker (University of British Columbia)