Isaenggyujangjeon(李生窺墻傳) is regarded as a work expressing allegorically the campaign of King Danjong(端宗)'s restoration. This is, also, a work adding two accidents centering around Honggeonjeok(紅巾賊)'s rebellion. It can be seen that this is composed of three stories, because another accident is added to this work in the form of an inserted poem(揷入詩). This paper is to examine the allegory of Isaenggyujangjeon centering around its backgrounds, characters, accidents, inserted poems, and so on. First, the backgrounds of this novel are Seonjuk-ri(善竹理), the Naktagyo(낙타교), Ulju(蔚州), and Bokju(復州). Seonjuk-ri, the Naktagyo, and Seonggyungwan(成均館) in Songdo(松島) are located in the same places as present, so it serves to raise the reality of historical accidents. Isaeng(李生)'s going down to Ulju, the family origin of Kim Siseop(金時習)'s mother Mrs. Jang(張氏) being from Ulju, and his mother's many relatives there - judging from these, Ulju is closely related to Kim Si -seop. Second, the characters of this novel are Isaeng, his parents, Choerang(崔?), and Sibit(시비). Of these Isaeng lives near the Naktagyo, and under his parents' order, he goes down to Ulju without a word to Choerang, and is also a passive and mean man who abandons his family and escapes alone in Honggeonjeok's rebellion. Kim Si-seop looks at Sayuksin(死六臣) tortured after the failure of King Danjong‘s restoration, but takes no measures to help them and wanders the country for the pain. It proves Isaeng to be Kim Si-seop. Choerang goes down to Bokju and is killed by thieves there. His parent before Honggeonjeok's rebellion is regarded as King Sejo(世祖) except whom King Danjong has no one to tum to, and his parents after the rebellion are able to be seen as faithful subjects as Sayuksin. Finally, Sibi serves as a foil to the atmosphere of the novel. Third, the happenings of the novel are Honggeonjeok's rebellion, and Choerang's and her parents' death. The former means that King Danjong is expelled from his throne and goes down to Yeongwol(寧越) owing to the failure of his restoration. The latter reveals allegorically the death of King Danjong's and his six royal subjects'(死六臣) by King Sejo's followers. And Isaeng's burying Choerang s parents at Ogwansan(五冠山) is compared with Kim Si-seop's burying five corpses at Noryangjin(鷺梁津). Fourth, inserted poems involve the fear caused by the failure of King Danjong's restoration and the advice of watching villainous subjects like a parrot. Six poems which Choerang gives to Isaeng show King Danjong's exile to Yeongwol by the failure of his restoration and their betrayal caused by the trial of his faithful subjects. They are written in "Yeongangcheopjangdo"(烟江疊壯圖) and "Yuhwanggomokdo"(幽皇古木圖). Poems compared to four seasons reveal their meanings clearly when each is connected with one another. A poem in the first picture scroll shows royal subjects arrested by King Sejo's followers owing to the failure of King Danjong's restoration, and a writer's helpless grief. A poem in the second picture scroll reveals Geumseongdaegun(錦城大君)'s plotting a rebellion, and he is symbolized as a virgin of the south. A poem in the third picture scroll presents Geumseongdaegun's death and the people's bitterness due to the exposure of his plotting a rebellion. Finally, a poem in the fourth picture scroll allegorises a story about King Danjong looking at crows in crowds in the night sky and dropping tears, foreseeing his death. Finally, weeping willow trees surrounding Choerang's house wall suggest Suyang(King Sejo)'s followers, and Choerang living there represents metaphorically King Danjong who demises his throne and is confined in Changdeokgung(昌德宮). In conclusion, Isaenggyujangjeon is able to be seen as a work expressing allegorically from the failure of King Danjong's restoration to his death.
AI 요약
연구주제
연구배경
연구방법
연구결과
주요내용
목차
1. 서론 2. 〈이생규정전〉의 서사구조 분석 3. 〈이생규장전〉에 나타난 우의성 고찰 4. 작가의식과 소설사적 의미 5. 결론 참고문헌 〈Abstract〉