The Korea Subak Association and the World Subak Federation are expanding international educational and archival initiatives focused on traditional northern Korean body culture through global educational platforms including MERLOT and KOCW.
The project seeks to preserve and internationally introduce traditional cultural practices connected to the historical body culture of the Korean Peninsula, including Subak, Subak Dance, Mindung Ssireum, and Seokjeon (traditional stone-fighting practices).
The Korea Subak Association serves as the historical transmission body preserving traditional Subak practices in Korea, while the World Subak Federation, registered in the State of Wyoming, United States, functions as an international educational and cultural network supporting global outreach and digital archiving.
Recent developments include renewed institutional access to KOCW (Korea Open CourseWare), Korea’s national open educational platform, alongside continuing educational activities through MERLOT, an international academic learning platform widely used in higher education environments.
The organizations stated that the project is not limited to martial arts instruction, but instead focuses on:
- intangible cultural heritage preservation,
- traditional body culture studies,
- digital archiving,
- refugee-era cultural transmission in Busan,
- and international open-access education.
The initiative also aims to connect historical materials related to early Korean cinema, post-war Busan refugee communities, and traditional transmission sites associated with Subak heritage bearers.
According to the organizations, future educational programs will include online lectures, digital archives, documentary materials, and international webinars designed to promote awareness of Korean traditional body culture within global educational environments.
The project is described as being aligned with international discussions concerning cultural sustainability, digital heritage preservation, and SDG-oriented educational initiatives.
The organizations emphasized that the long-term goal is to preserve and transmit endangered forms of Korean traditional body culture as living cultural memory for future generations.
https://www.youtube.com/@WSFSubak
https://www.facebook.com/groups/956501063419496?locale=ko_KR
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This post was last modified on 2026년 05월 26일 1:33 오후


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