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Grief Ministry as Homecoming: Framing Death from a Korean-American Perspective
Authors:Soo-Young Kwon
Affiliation:(1) Assistant Professor of Pastoral Theology at Yonsei University, Associate Director of Clinical Training at Yonsei Christian Counseling Center, Seoul, Korea;(2) Yonsei University, United Graduate School of Theology, 134 Shinchon-dong, Seodaemoon-ku, Seoul, Korea
Abstract:Using the personal experience of a “homecoming” funerary journey from the U.S. to Korea, the author probes the cultural construction of familial bonds between the living and the dead in Korean and biblical (Genesis) funeral narratives. This article highlights the cultural differences between American and Korean funeral traditions — that is, (1) dying at a hospital vs. dying at home, (2) embalming vs. sup/yom (washing/binding of the corpse), (3) metal casket vs. wooden coffin, (4) committal vs. banhon (returning of the spirit) – to explore the religious and practical implications of the multicultural grieving process for pastoral care and grief ministry in which death is conceived as returning to the familial, cultural, and spiritual homes.
Contact InformationSoo-Young KwonEmail:
Keywords:  KeywordHeading"  >: funeral narratives  homecoming  ritual  grief ministry  Korean culture
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