Jump to content

Sugungga

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sugungga
Hangul
수궁가
Hanja
Revised RomanizationSugungga
McCune–ReischauerSugungga

Sugungga is one of the five surviving stories of the Korean pansori storytelling tradition. The other stories are Simcheongga, Heungbuga, Jeokbyeokga, and Chunhyangga.

Sugungga is considered to be more exciting and farcical than the other pansoris because of its personification of animals. The satire is more frank and humorous. It has serious parts as well in the characters of the king and loyal retainers. Therefore Sugungga is regarded as the "small Jeokbyeokga;" so Pansori singers sing those parts earnestly.[1]

Sugungga is based on the story of the Dragon King of the Southern Sea, a terrapin, and a wily rabbit. This story is believed to have stemmed from a tale "Gutojiseol" (龜兎之說, also pronounced "Gwitojiseol") from the section on Kim Yu-sin from the Silla dynasty in Samguk sagi,[2][3] and possibly from The Monkey and the Crocodile from the Jataka tales, an Indian literature,[4] The theme of this story is the relationship of subject to king.

The play was popularized by the South Korean band Leenalchi who uploaded their live action performance of the story on YouTube. The video went viral in South Korea, amassing over 6 million views as of January 2021.[5]

Plot

[edit]

The story begins in a fictional kingdom in the Southern Sea ruled by a Dragon King who suffers from an illness that can only be cured by consuming the liver of a rabbit.[a] In hopes of finding the liver to cure his disease, the dragon king commands his servants to go onto land, find a rabbit, and bring its liver back to the kingdom. Out of the servants, a terrapin volunteers to perform this act, showing his loyalty to the king.

The terrapin is met with several challenges on land from an encounter with a predatory tiger to not knowing what a rabbit looks like. At the end, however, the terrapin succeeds in finding a rabbit. In order to get the rabbit to follow it back to the underwater kingdom, the terrapin lures the rabbit by telling him that a wonderous and luxurious life awaits it there. The rabbit falls for it, follows the terrapin underwater, and soon finds itself captured in the dragon king's palace. The rabbit soon realizes that it had been tricked and will be soon slaughtered for its liver. Right before slaughtering, however, the rabbit tells the dragon king that its liver is so much in demand that someone may steal it away from the king as soon as he kills it and that because of this, it had to be slaughtered somewhere away from everyone. The dragon king listens to the rabbit and commands the terrapin to kill it away from the kingdom. Upon getting far enough from the kingdom, the rabbit ridicules the dragon king's naïveté and flees back onto land, essentially tricking both the terrapin and the dragon king.

The story ends with the rabbit ridiculing the king and the terrapin once again, but admiring the terrapin's loyalty to the king as well.[6]

Theme

[edit]

The primary, over-arching theme of the story is the consequences of being naïve. In the story, the dragon King learns the hard way that being naive is a negative trait by missing an opportunity to live. It can be reasonably implied that the King loses its life after the story because of his naïveté.

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ In "Gutojiseol" (龜兎之說), the daughter of the Dragon King from the Eastern Sea suffered from the illness.[2]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "수궁가".
  2. ^ a b Jeong, C.-K. (2009). "The Way of Reading and Contexts of <Gutojiseol(The Tale about a Rabbit and a Turtle)> in the Kim Yu-shin Section of 『Samguksagi』". Hanguk Munhak Nonchong. 52 (52): 5–30. doi:10.16873/tkl.2009..52.5.
  3. ^ Che, M. (January 9, 2023). "토끼의 간 이야기 Hare's Liver". Retrieved April 15, 2024.
  4. ^ "Hare's Liver". Encyclopedia of Korean Folk Culture. Retrieved 2024-03-28.
  5. ^ "이날치X앰비규어스 댄스컴퍼니 - 범 내려온다 [유희열의 스케치북/You Heeyeol's Sketchbook] 20201009 - YouTube". www.youtube.com. 9 October 2020. Archived from the original on 2021-12-21. Retrieved 2021-01-01.
  6. ^ Choi, Dong-hyun (2001). "수궁가". Encyclopedia of Korean Folk Culture. Retrieved January 5, 2021.