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As living treasures age, Korea chronicles keepers of its ancient soul

For generations, the survival of Korea’s most revered cultural traditions relied on a fragile human chain, passed down strictly from master to apprentice in quiet workshops and hidden courtyards. Now, as the nation navigates hypermodernization and shifts toward globalized, digital mediums, the state is accelerating an ambitious archiving initiative to ensure these ancient lineages are not lost to time. The Korea Heritage Service (KHS) on Wednesday announced the publication of three comprehensive biographical volumes detailing the lives, philosophies and methodologies of government-designated “living national treasures.” The texts profile Kim Chun-sik, a master craftsman of “soban” — hand-carved wooden dining tables native to the Naju region — alongside Kim Il-ku and Jeong Sun-im, two legendary virtuosos of “pansori,” Korea’s traditional operatic narrative singing. The publications represent the latest output of a systematic multimedia preservation campaign launched in 1995. For centuries, arts like pansori — characterized by its raw, commanding vocalizations and minimalist dr

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