A Case Study on Local Cultural Sensibility and Healing Tourism in
Korea
Young Suk Kwon
Cultural Heritage Preservation Research Institute, Pusan National University, Busan, Korea
Keywords: Local cultural sensibility, healing tourism, cultural heritage.
Abstract: The purpose of this study was to develop tourism resources that can create promising economic benefits for
the future society and provide basic data for creative regional development by looking at examples of
successful development of the tourism industry that fits the Korean local cultural sensibility image. For this
purpose, it explores the meaning of local cultural sensibility, classifies the local cultural resources into the
material, human, and sociocultural resources, and focuses on countries that show global success stories about
the value of cultural resources that each resource has. In addition, the study investigates the healing tourism
policies each local government has implemented for the local cultural sensibility differentiated by region
focusing on Busan, Gangwon-do, and Jeju-do of Korea. As a result, Busan has implemented a global marine
culture tourism industry policy as an international city based on ocean sensibility. In Gangwon-do, the local
cultural characteristics formed by the mountain cultural sensibility developed abundant natural resources in
the high mountain area and food resources in the clean area, providing various local cultural resources to
tourists. Finally, the healing tourism industry in the Jeju Island, the pearl of Korea, has promoted an attractive
global tourism industry associating with various trails formed around Mount Halla along with the
harmonization of the marine resources surrounding the entire island and the unique indigenous local culture
of Jeju.
1 INTRODUCTION
Local culture is a sociocultural product formed
through a long history and processes of social change
in each region based on locality. Therefore, the local
culture has region-specific cultural values and
meanings that we cannot see in different areas. In the
wake of the recent digital-based Fourth Industrial
Revolution, people’s emotions are becoming
increasingly dry. People are wandering in search of
new patterns of life within the harsh artificial
intelligence system that are continuously changing
the areas of human life beset by a wave of new
technologies. The unique emotional realm that
humans have is in danger of deteriorating and drying
up. Thus, it is necessary to prepare a new life pattern
for an emotional-cultural space where people can
recover their tired bodies and minds. This study
examines the sensibility images existing in each
region, focusing on Busan, Gangwon-do, and Jeju-do
regarding the local cultural tourism promotion
associated with local sensibility in Korea. The study
also intends to help design tourism products by
considering how each region has developed these
images into a successful healing tourism resource.
Furthermore, it seeks to restore the meaning of local
cultural sensibility that meets the new era and
provides basic data for healing tourism.
2 MEANING OF LOCAL
CULTURAL SENSIBILITY
2.1 What is Local Cultural Sensibility?
Local culture is a specialized cultural product unique
to the region formed over time based on locality,
which represents the unique identity of the local
community. On the other hand, we can consider local
cultural sensibility from the perspective of how the
local characteristics of each region can affect the
emotional realm of human beings. For example, the
locality of Busan is a local sensibility that reflects the
sea sensibility well. Compared to other regions,
Busan has a local sensibility code that gives freshness
Kwon, Y.
A Case Study on Local Cultural Sensibility and Healing Tourism in Korea.
DOI: 10.5220/0010398500003051
In Proceedings of the International Conference on Culture Heritage, Education, Sustainable Tourism, and Innovation Technologies (CESIT 2020), pages 651-655
ISBN: 978-989-758-501-2
Copyright
c
2022 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
651
and refreshment of an open blue image. As such, each
region has a unique cultural sensibility image created
by the natural environment and sociocultural
conditions of the region. These local cultural
sensibility images are the major clues that can
characterize the local cultural tourism industry and
differentiate it from other regions. Since these clues
become a resource that induces attractive curiosity
about tourism products when tourists visit tourist
attractions, it requires special planning to develop
local cultural tourism products. Even if regions have
the same ocean sensibility, we can differentiate the
local sensibility of each region in various ways
according to diverse marine resources, natural
environment other than the sea, and the sociocultural
environment conditions. Additionally, each creative
local cultural sensibility becomes a valuable local
cultural asset, which we can transform into a tourism
resource by inducing unusual curiosity for visiting
tourists. Therefore, each local government can expect
high added value by discovering and selecting unique
sensibilities for each region and planning tourism
cultural products with creative ideas. In other words,
unique local cultural resources formed over a long
time can create local cultural values different from
other regions. As a result, it will enhance the positive
image and status of the region, which will be a driving
force stimulating the local economy by attracting
many tourists.
2.2 Types and Values of Local Cultural
Resources
Local cultural resources can be divided into three
main categories: material resources, human
resources, and sociocultural resources. Depending on
the characteristics of each local culture, each resource
will carry out tourism industry policies in each region
by finding key clues for regional development within
these three categories.
2.2.1 Material Resources
Material resources are local natural environmental
resources and are local cultural resources created by
geographical features, climate, and soil. It has
economic value as a tourism resource that can create
the best added value by building an infrastructure that
manages and fosters the region's unique natural
environment. For example, Switzerland is a
representative country. Switzerland has developed its
tourism industry as a major industry from the past to
the present day, with its beautiful natural environment
as its primary source of sustainable tourism resources.
The relaxed life of locals in Switzerland provides
tourists with a nice and friendly character created by
nature. Switzerland is attracting attention as a global
tourist attraction by providing a national-level
meticulous policy support to create a pollution-free
tourist destination, accessible transportation system,
clean air management, and the nature management
which allows visitors to feel the natural beauty of the
plain.
2.2.2 Human Resources
The human environment refers to the human cultural
resources created as a result of social activities and
the achievements of the great social leaders who have
worked in the area, such as artists, politicians, as local
characters created by the historical environment. The
country representing this is the United Kingdom.
British history is a tourist item that sets it apart from
other countries with special tourism products created
from the history of great politicians and royal
cultures, great literature writers like Shakespeare, and
the history of Oxford University. From pictures of
faces of many people decorating the international
airport to many storytelling spaces behind the British
imperial history, Shakespeare’s birthplace, and the
various stories surrounding Oxford University have
become attractive tourist resources in the United
Kingdom.
2.2.3 Sociocultural Resources
Finally, sociocultural resources are historical and
cultural products made over a long period, mainly
referring to tangible and intangible cultural heritage.
Tangible cultural heritage refers to a visible cultural
heritage such as buildings, paintings, sculptures, and
crafts with artistic value. An intangible cultural
heritage is an invisible cultural heritage such as
theatre, dance, and music that has technical values.
Among these cultural heritage resources, countries
designate world-valued cultural heritage resources as
an important national cultural property. Each country
establishes policies for cultural properties and
preserves and manages it. Italy is a representative
country that has succeeded in promoting tourism with
sociocultural resources. Italy is a cultural heritage
created by its ancestors and is popular with people
who want to travel to Europe. Italy is putting a lot of
effort into global tourism policies because of its high
share of tourism revenue, and the administrative body
is also run only by the central government. Every city
is lined with tourists from all over the world to see the
ancestors’ architectural styles and the immortal
masterpieces housed in museums. Truly remarkable
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652
historical products are telling love and overflowing
stories to future generations. The fact that countless
artists and scholars continue to walk from all over the
world carries a message that conveys something to
our lives struggling with modern times. As a small
Mediterranean flower, Italy delights tourists with its
rich cultural heritage, beautiful natural scenery, and
the image of an advanced country leading in design.
As discussed above, the cultural heritage of each
region creates a local cultural identity with the
uniqueness and originality of each region based on
material, human and sociocultural tourism resources,
and uses this as a tourism resource.
3 LOCAL CULTURAL
SENSIBILITY AND HEALING
TOURISM IN KOREA
3.1 Busan, Marine Area Sensibility and
Healing Tourism
Busan is a port city in the southern part of Korea.
Busan has the image of an international city with the
development of commerce, marine cultural resources
of the port city, and many foreign visitors. In
particular, as Busan has a port close to the city center,
we can expect a tourism industry that combines local
industries with various contents. Thus, Busan is
developing into a global tourist city. Around Songdo,
Haeundae, and Taejongdae, centering on luxury
hotels and restaurants where people can especially
feel the ocean sensibility, there are various kinds of
famous restaurants and sashimi restaurants along with
the open blue sea. In addition, magnificent bridges
across the middle of the sea are particularly
noticeable. There are convention centers, art galleries,
and museums in the city center to hold international
events, providing various cultural contents. Marine
culture-related festivals such as international film
festivals are receiving favorable reviews from many
tourists visiting Busan as well. Busan also has a well-
established foundation as an international medical
tourism city to induce optimal tourism for foreigners
visiting Busan with the ocean sensibility as the
primary image. To this end, Busan City is focusing on
the medical tourism industry with a high-quality
medical tourism infrastructure by constructing a
nuclear hospital along the coastline of the East Sea,
which has beautiful scenery. Large and small hotels
and cafes full of culture and art decorate the coastline
beautifully, providing a space for relaxation and
healing to Busan citizens and tourists. Recently,
Busan City has been selected as a target destination
for international tourism city and is pushing for a
global marine city development project. As a result,
the Busan Metropolitan Government is working on
port policies to ease regulations such as the
Restriction of Special Taxation Act and the Tariff Act
for Free Trade. Jagalchi Market, International Market
(Gukje Market), Taejongdae, Haeundae, Moulundae,
and Songdo are some of the most representative
tourist attractions in Busan.
3.2 Mountain Local Cultural
Sensibility and Healing Tourism,
Gangwon-do
The Gangwon-do region is promoting tourism culture
policy by properly harmonizing two elements of the
sea sensibility formed along the east coast and the
cultural sensibility of the mountain region formed
along the Taebaek Mountains. Here we look at the
characteristics of the local culture created by the
cultural sensibility of the deep mountain areas and the
healing tourism policy of the region. First of all, the
Gangwon-do region has a cultural sensibility created
by the beautiful mountains and fertile soil. Gangwon-
do has ski resorts and monorail, rail bikes, beach
trains formed along the east coastline, and abundant
food produced by the soil. Various herbs produced in
this clean area, as well as potatoes and corn, a staple
of Gangwon-do, are popular with tourists as local
branded products. They have developed a variety of
processing and cooking methods that can attract
tourists to their famous food. Since the land is fertile
and the altitude is high, eco-friendly vegetables in this
clean area have been distributed nationwide through
a chain network. As local indigenous products are in
the limelight nationwide, there is a system of direct
and indirect delivery to homes. The reason that the
Gangwon-do region can supply food with abundant
nutrients with clean local agricultural products is that
alpine plants over 1,400m above sea level grow on
fertile soil formed of broad-leaved trees in this region.
Thus, Gangwon-do offers differentiated food from
other localities. The mountain ratio is 91.76, and the
average elevation is 468 meters. Most of which are
deep mountains. With its clear and beautiful natural
scenery encompassing mountains, lakes, seas, it
provides shelter for tourists. Fresh spaces such as
birch forest trails and cypress tree forests can give
visitors a comfortable green sensibility, providing a
space for natural healing of the body and mind.
Meaningful artists from other regions are attracting
foreign tourists by adding the local cultural sensibility
to the global cultural sensibility. Typical examples
A Case Study on Local Cultural Sensibility and Healing Tourism in Korea
653
include beer tasting and strawberry farm experience
tours. It also provides various cultural contents to
many tourists seeking to heal in the mountains.
3.3 Island Local Cultural Sensibility
and Healing Tourism, Jeju Island
Jeju Island is a small island located at the
southernmost tip of Korea. Its size is almost the same
as that of Samosir Island, Indonesia. It is an
outstanding tourist destination that is receiving
attention from many tourists visiting Korea with its
unique sensibility image formed by volcanic
outcroppings.
Jeju Island was designated as a biosphere reserve
in December 2002, registered as a World Natural
Heritage Site in June 2007, and given the title of
Global Geopark in October 2010. As a result, Jejus
tourism industry became more active and developed
into an international tourist city. Many people visit as
a space for re-creation for work such as various
international events and conferences, company
training, and orientation for new employees. The
airport is also open to the same level as international
flights, so it is popular with domestic people as a
special travel product. The characteristics of the local
sensibility image of Jeju are the Forest of Reflection
in various forms and the Olle trail that spreads in all
directions around Mount Halla. Most of the roads
harmonize with the fresh sea landscape and attract
tourists as a special place of healing and relaxation.
As many Olle trails, such as the Forest of Reflection,
are built, many tourists visiting Jeju Island adjust to
nature and recover their body and mind while walking
the long and short forest trails. The Olleh trail is a
harmonious blend of Jeju's diverse indigenous and
modern cultures, providing exotic attractions for
tourists.
In addition to the Olle trail, Jeju Island has
recently been making storytelling based on the history
and culture of Jeju people in various parts of the Jeju
area and turning local culture into a resource. As
modern society recognizes the importance of the
emotional era in preparation for the age of artificial
intelligence, many people became interested in
planning tourism and cultural products through
storytelling. In particular, Jeju Island is rapidly
moving in response to this trend, creating various
storytelling with local government budgets. They
have created a suitable space in the middle of the
Forest of Reflection, including theme parks, to
display them or to offer tourists with local cultural
attractions in the form of an experience canter. They
make such storytelling through the process of
business orders linked to the storytelling department
at Jeju National University or through a national
public offering project. By discovering invisible
myths and stories that come down through oral
traditions, it creates tangible assets that can serve as a
model for modern people, encouraging tourists to
experience an exotic culture. The themes of
storytelling in Jeju include Jeju’s myths and other
geological formation processes, the history of Jeju
people’s joys and sorrows, and Jeju’s unique lifestyle.
4 CONCLUSIONS
As described above, examples of cultural tourism
were examined centering on Busan, Gangwon-do and
Jeju-si in Korea as basic data for regional cultural
sensitivity and healing tourism industry. This was
studied because the natural environment and
conditions surrounding the northern Sumatra region
of Indonesia have similar environments to those of
these three regions of Korea. And the results of this
study are intended to help the development of the
tourism industry in the Toba lake region in the future.
Toba lake It is a unique island created in a huge
lake formed by volcanic eruptions and beautiful
natural scenery from ancient times, and the region has
the richest tourism and cultural resources in the
northern Sumatra region. In each region, relative
family communities have owned a family-oriented
village culture for a long time. In addition, the unique
cultural heritages that have not changed easily due to
the environment of the island area are well preserved
in oral or visible form. Therefore, in the future, these
cultural assets can give tourists a sacred message that
is not common in modern society.
Therefore, we need to find and study the invisible
and intangible cultural heritage of this Tobe Lake
area. And from a new perspective, it is necessary to
develop tourism resources through continuous
research that can benefit the modern society. In other
words, it is necessary to create useful values of the
culture of the region through research. And it should
provide tourists visiting the Toba Lake region with
new and unique Toba Lake region tourism and
cultural products. Therefore, policy support is needed
to quickly lay the foundation for a sustainable global
tourism culture.
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