K-pop? South Korean Popular Music‚ the Culture Industry‚ and National Identity John Lie* In the early 2010’s‚ the expansion of South Korean popular culture around the world is led by popular music‚ usually known as Kpop. In this paper I seek to answer two questions. First‚ what are the sources of its success beyond the South Korean national border? Secondly‚ what does it say about contemporary South Korean society and culture? Key Words: K-pop‚ Korean Wave‚ Hallyu‚ South Korean Popular Culture
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culture‚ language‚ and customs that are different from other Asian countries. In South Korea‚ the citizens greatly value hard work‚ filial piety‚ and humility in their daily lives. South Koreans are very proud people in which they pride themselves in their traditional culture and their financial success. South Koreans have certain etiquettes and manners that are highly esteemed in their culture. Like Japan and China‚ the bow is the main custom of greeting someone. It is not only a form of greeting
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Delicious cuisine is definitely something the whole world is interested in‚ and a person’s taste for food can often reveal his lifestyle‚ personality‚ and even status. In Geoffrey Chaucer’s Prologue to The Canterbury Tales‚ we can learn about the Franklin’s hospitality and hedonistic lifestyle through Chaucer’s portrait of the Franklin’s refined love of exquisite cuisine. Through his lofty diction‚ use of poetic devices‚ and imagery‚ Chaucer revealed the Franklin’s love for pure food‚ hospitality
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freedom. Her father died in China after they escaped‚ and she had to bury him without crying because she was afraid of going back to her country. Then she said‚ “There are so many North Korean women and teenage girls refugees are victimised and even sold for money.” This made me wonder what can we do to help North Korean refugees. First of all‚ I was shocked by the fact that kids in North Korea have no human right to do things they want to do. They are brainwashed‚ so they don’t know what is going
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Korean Immigration by Jenny Franko Pogi hajimara. In Korean‚ this translates to “don’t give up‚” three words that became their motto during their times of despair. The Koreans have faced many difficulties‚ but managed to overcome them with the aid of hope. As soon as one war would come to an end‚ another one would start. Though Koreans have only recently immigrated in large numbers to the United States‚ due to North Korean oppression‚ they have managed to make a reasonable amount of contributions
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Korea; ruled by Kim Jong-Un‚ human rights are being violated.North Koreans are currently being tortured‚deprived of equality before
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immigrants however mesh as well as others. South-Korean Americans travel here and often find a need to change the way they act in order to fit in. I will be exploring the intersection between Korean culture and that of the United States during the immigration periods of the last 75 years using Confucianism as well as myths to describe what it means
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Korean Wave Hanryu‚ the Korean wave refers to the significant increase in the popularity of South Korean entertainment‚ trends and culture beginning in the 1990s‚ especially in countries of Asia‚ and more recently in other parts of the world. It presents a prodigious surge in the international visibility of Korean culture. The terminology was coined in mid-1999 by Beijing journalists‚ appalled by the fast growing popularity of Korean wave in China. The wave is more than a mere cultural phenomenon;
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History of the Korean Broadcasting Early Stage(~1926) The first broadcasting of Korea was carried out by the Bureau of Post of the Chosun Trustee Government in 1924. At that time‚ the Bureau of Post acquired receiver and sender for the experimental broadcasting. The first experimental broadcasting was successful in November 1924 with 750 Kh/50W‚ and from 1925 on the Bureau of Post Wireless Laboratory broadcasted 4 times a week. the following year (1926) the Kyungsung Broadcasting Corporation
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Consequences of the Korean War * The Korean War never ended‚ and they are still under an armistice to this day. The Korean War is technically not over; all that’s keeping the two sides from going to war again is a cease-fire agreement. * The Korean War brought the US and Russia further apart‚ and the fear of communism would later lead the US to throw itself into Vietnam‚ to avoid another North Korea. * It also brought China into conflict with the US‚ bringing bad feelings between the
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