The fugure of Yuhwa has scarcely been analyzed closely in earlier studies due to the strong emphasis on Jumong or has mainly been discussed only in terms of her divinity. In previous studies, the narrative of Yuhwa has been regarded as a model of female hardship. This study, however, argues that the narrative of Yuhwa is not a model of hardship but of women endeavoring to live their own lives. Yuhwa is not chosen in the process of marriage but comes by herself to another land to be independent from the land of her father. At the feast after her marriage, however, Habaek interferes again with Yuhwa and Haemosu about their decision making. Although Yuhwa chooses her own spouse and is freed from her father’s world, she returns to her past modes of behavior by mistake. Haemosu ascends to heaven and leaves Yuhwa who again goes into exile to Woobalsu, the land of her father. In doing so, Yuhwa keeps trying to reach land and finally comes there with the aid of King Geumwa. The fact that Yuhwa moves from water to land means that she extends her own world for herself. The qualities that allow her to come to land from the water are perfectly shown by her conception of Jumong. Yuhwa’s extension of her own world leads to the extension of divinity. Yuhwa coming onto land gives birth to Jumong and makes him live independently. By doing so, Yuhwa lets her child go differently than her father, Habaek, did and he is reborn as an independent being. Yuhwa’s power of realizing and establishing herself firmly as ‘oneself’ and ‘continuing’ to stay in the center allows her to be renewed and extend her own divinity. Also, in the world she has built, she creates a new life for herself and understands and respects her child, Jumong, trying to actualize himself just as she had in the past. This study finds from Yuhwa’s narrative that Yuhwa is not just a character bearing her hardships solely for the sake of Jumong as argued in previous discussionsm, but is a character making efforts to establish her own
being and extend her own world.