In Korea a mask is never just a mask.For over a thousand years the sacred tal masks have been Korea's most dangerous truth-tellers its most powerful healers and its bridge between the living and the dead. Carved from lightning-struck trees and worn by shamans fools and rebels these wooden faces have laughed away plagues mocked tyrants and given voice to restless ghosts-all while the drums beat and villages danced at the edge of the divine.In this revelatory exploration a passionate mythologist uncovers the forgotten wisdom of Korea's mask traditions: how the Sea Dragon King commanded villagers to laugh away death why an artisan died before finishing the face of god and how masked performers became vessels for spirits who had stories yet to tell. Here are tales of comedy as exorcism laughter as rebellion and the understanding that the sacred and the comic are not opposites-they are twins.Drawing on regional mythologies from Andong to Gangneung from ancient shamanic rituals to Joseon-era satire this lecture reveals what the tal teaches us about transformation community and the courage to speak truth when silence is demanded. It's a journey into Korea's living mythology and an invitation to examine the masks we all wear-and why some truths can only be told by faces that are not our own.For anyone who has ever laughed to keep from crying worn a mask to survive or sensed that the gods might have a sense of humor after all.The tal is Korea's oldest theater its most direct prayer and its most secret history carved into wood lacquered in pigment and whispered in drumbeats.
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