4 pages due 6amRead and review Euny Hong’s book The Birth of Korean Cool: How One Nation is Conquering the World through Pop Culture. Highlight the central ideas described in the book and offer a critical analysis. Choose 2-3 chapters to review in depth. - Management
4 pages due 6amRead and review Euny Hong’s book The Birth of Korean Cool: How One Nation is Conquering the World through Pop Culture. Highlight the central ideas described in the book and offer a critical analysis. Choose 2-3 chapters to review in depth. Your book review will be 4-5 pages long (double-spaced).
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Markets, Globalization &
Development Review
Volume 1 | Number 2 Article 7
2016
Euny Hong , The Birth of Korean Cool (2014)
Soonkwan Hong
Michigan Technological University
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Article 7.
DOI: 10.23860/MGDR-2016-01-02-07
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Euny Hong, The Birth of Korean Cool (2014)
Soonkwan Hong
Keywords
Korea, Cool, Hallyu (K-pop), Pop culture, Gangnam Style, Samsung
Soonkwan Hong is an associate professor of marketing at Michigan Technological University. His
research focuses on sociocultural and ideological aspects of consumption, which should facilitate our
understanding of a variety of consumption practices, consumers’ lived experiences, and stylization of
their lives. Currently, he studies alternative sustainable lifestyles in multiple ecovillages in the U.S. and
Europe and conducts research on eco-tourism. His research interests also extend to globalization of
popular culture. He has published in international journals, such as Journal of Business Research,
Marketing Theory, Qualitative Market Research, and Arts and the Market, and regularly presented at
prestigious conferences.
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Book Review
Euny Hong, The Birth of Korean Cool (2014)
Cool does not automatically translate into success unless it is methodically
manufactured. As a mantra to revitalize a country in deep political and
financial troubles, this seems quite counterintuitive, even atheoretical
(Frank 1997; Nancarrow and Nancarrow 2007), but it nonetheless
happened, and is still happening, in and around Korea. The Birth of
Korean Cool by Euny Hong (2014) is keen to demonstrate that Korea is
fully capable of rebuilding the country’s image by making things that used
to “suck” (as in Samsuck) look glaringly cool, despite its unequivocally
‘uncool’ history, tradition, social practices, and, in particular, geopolitics.
Korea is no longer a country of desperate people, suffering from a
lack of access to natural resources, entrenched (and almost
unfathomable) corruption, deep-rooted regionalism, and lack of creativity
and innovation. How has the country managed to solve all these
historically haunting issues and overcome such handicaps in a relatively
short period of time? The Birth of Korean Cool provides a myriad of
examples, albeit mostly anecdotal, to answer this question. In Hong’s view,
one of the crucial approaches Korea has undertaken is to implement,
often controversial, government-led projects, such as the formation of The
Ministry of Future Creation, regardless of any socio-politico-economical
justifiability. Hallyu, another name for K-Pop, represented mostly by Psy’s
Gangnam Style, soap operas, and some award-winning movies that are
unmistakably popular globally, across all continents, is not a byproduct of
the arguably foolhardy top-down initiatives, but the very projected
consequence, according to Hong.
In Korea, a country with an enormous amount of Confucian
overtone, standing out and challenging opinions and/or decisions of senior
members of society has been a taboo held for far too long. Such collective
unconsciousness can be directly blamed for various cultural and political
afflictions that potentially, and, indeed, nearly prevented the country from
becoming truly sovereign, democratic, modern and prosperous.
Correspondingly, the book introduces a series of culturally appalling
Korean-specific day-to-day practices in both pre-modern and post-modern
Korea. Deeply ingrained gender biases, thrashings at public schools,
mandatory testing for intestinal parasites, MMPSI (massively multiplayer
plastic surgery industry), MMOG (massively multiplayer online game),
ultra expensive crammer schools and tutoring, skyrocketing suicide rates,
and the very brutal reality imposed by the political economy of chaebols
(large business conglomerate) are some notable items in the book that
1
Hong: Book Review: Korean Cool
Published by [email protected], 2016
tickle (and possibly satiate) readers’ pallets salivating for the exotic, if not
a more grotesque version of orientalism (for the reader unfamiliar with the
term, the reference is to Said 1979).
Koreans (including me) can possibly echo with Hong who
appreciates the modern history of Korea based on the observable misery,
irony, adversity, and then the – almost uncanny – glory Korea has recently
realized. At the same time, however, the analyses, arguments, and
critiques provided may not be ‘cool’ enough to convince Koreans about
their own lived experiences. It may rather come short, for some Koreans
and knowledgeable Korea scholars, as “Modern Korea for Dummies.” Not
wishing to further discount the author’s authentic motive followed by the
quite unique and useful “up close and personal” accounts for the triumph
of the nation, it is imperative to note that the modern history of Korea
cannot be summarized merely with K-pop (i.e., Gangnam Style) and
Samsung. This is even more the case if the summary comes from an
observer, not participant, who was born and raised in the U.S. until she
landed in Gangnam, an affluent district in Seoul, Korea, at the age of 12
and left the country again, presumably after high school.
Korea, certainly, has sociocultural problems, just as do many other
countries including first-world countries, but they are probably not as
serious as those described in the book. For example, the issue of
gendered society, as Hong writes: “No boys allowed in French class and
no girls allowed in German class.” On the contrary, there were as many
boys as girls in my high school French class in Korea, and my favorite
teacher was male. Surprisingly, the author and I appear to be the same
age – yet the Koreas that both of us observed in our youth seem to be
divergent. Also, such issues are neither Korea-specific, nor time and
space-specific, as we are still dealing with the same kind of seemingly
bulletproof glass ceiling even in the U.S., reinforced particularly strongly
by the 2016 presidential election. Take another example. Admittedly,
Korea is the “mecca” for plastic surgery, from mild to quite radical
procedures, but the chapter entitled “The Gangnam Chainsaw Massacre”,
in which Hong describes, for example, “…the jaw contouring, called
mandible angle reduction surgery” is a relatively circumstantial story, with
unverifiable numbers of patients. In fact, there is a good alternative, the
injection needle. (Coincidently, the industry is turning their focus to
“medical tourists” from other Asian countries. Hallyu now evidently
includes plastic surgery.)
Besides these anecdotes, some of the information from the
interviews also induces doubtful double-takes. For example, Hong
conveys an excerpt from an interview, “…American television is losing the
2
Markets, Globalization & Development Review, Vol. 1 [2016], No. 2, Art. 7
http://digitalcommons.uri.edu/mgdr/vol1/iss2/7
DOI: 10.23860/MGDR-2016-01-02-07
future because it has done almost nothing to accommodate to global
tastes…the world loves K-dramas.” What is palpably missing in Euny
Hong’s account is the fact that American television has been picking up its
pace and committed fans in the last few years: Game of Thrones, House
of Cards, The Walking Dead, to name a few. Paradoxically, many Koreans
have been indulging with Mid (American dramas). Hong carries on with
another quote that is also questionable; “Minorities in the U.S. are
increasing, so race and language are less significant barriers. The
audience for Korean films is obviously going to increase.” What is, de
facto, obvious is that race and language issues are resilient and not going
away, at least not at any projectable speed, or so effortlessly. As such,
several stories in the book demonize, hyperbolize, and then gentrify
Korean culture, and its people, to sentimentalize the success story (albeit
in a very efficient and fascinating manner.)
Notwithstanding the aforementioned potential misrepresentations,
The Birth of Korean Cool ultimately deserves a great deal of credit for
introducing the concept Han, which is essential to better understand
‘Korean’, as the mystical momentum of the country, as well as the national
psyche. Han is a concept, as well as a medical condition, specific to
Koreans, defined as hopeless and helpless resentment, agony, and
unidentifiable pain. Such “wrath” is mainly caused by the numerous
invasions Korea has had to endure throughout its long history, and as
recently as the 36-year Japanese reign in the early last century. This
“racial memory” is still at the heart of many Koreans who dance like Psy,
sing like Girls’ Generation (Korean girl group), produce films like Oldboy,
perform like Yon-sama (Bae Yong-joon, a Korean actor), and work hard to
invent Galaxy phones: these are cultural and technological vendettas on
the erstwhile oppressive traditional forces, of the East and the West.
In the end, Hong leaves readers with a fundamental, and yet
stimulating (perhaps highly clichéd), question that invites a plethora of
responses: Are we about to witness a paradigm shift in the global political
economy based on the new cultural currency, ‘cool’? I would answer the
question with another: Are we ready? Clearly, as Hong points out, it is
irrefutable that Kimchi and Bibimbab have gained vast interests from the
West in the past decade, and Korea has flourished enough to almost, if
not entirely, forget the national trauma of needing to accept emergency
relief funds from the IMF (International Monetary Fund) less than twenty
years ago. The daunting and acute reality obscured in the book, however,
is that the nation is not actually “conquering” the world in any aspect of our
lives (notwithstanding the fact that the word “conquer” sounds so colonial
in the age of postcolonialism). Many Koreans in the U.S., and other
3
Hong: Book Review: Korean Cool
Published by [email protected], 2016
developed countries, still struggle to find a place that has decent Kimchi,
driving by countless Chinese and Japanese restaurants. Barack Obama’s
brief idea about copying Psy’s horse dance at his inauguration ball (USA
Today 2012) does not necessarily conjure up anything close to the
mythical images surrounding John Lennon, the recent Nobel Laureate.
Samsung is facing the demise of the whole Galaxy line because of
physical risks associated with Galaxy Note 7, and it is reluctant to bring up
the massive recall for top-loading washers.
What is still not so cool about Korea is the practice of
“overidentification” (as in Zizek 2009) and the collective misconception of
itself as unique and novel. Koreans have been “overidentifying” with the
global competitors in terms of the methods, contents, and forms to beat or
meet them, as well as the overall system. We have seen many
government-led projects – in the West and now in Asia – aimed at reviving
a country’s economy (viz., The New Deal, Chinese Economic Reform,
India’s New Industrial Policy 1991, and more recently Japan’s Abenomics)
with a wide range of sociopolitical ramifications. Although the results of the
programs have been mixed, each country is left with a cultural, not pop
cultural, legacy that is more extensively and intensively encroaching upon
global consumers’ lives. As Hong would agree, Korea has just not been
honored with such a cultural triumph. Focusing on pop culture may or may
not enable the country to conquer anything, even with the great work ethic
owing to Han.
Poignantly, it is recognized later in the book that the country as a
person would be diagnosed with neuroticism, oscillating between
inferiority and superiority complex. The demon exists deep inside the
society. Koreans will become able to defeat it when they realize pop
culture is simply a façade of any given culture, and the exchange rate for
the currency, cool, is exceptionally high. Unfortunately, by the same token,
the author spoils her own conclusion in her note at the beginning; “Korea
refers to South Korea, unless otherwise specified.” Watching a news show
featuring the celebration of Halloween in Korea, a guy asks me, “So you’re
a professor from Korea, right? North or South?” When the question
becomes a “rhetorical” one, Koreans may be able to celebrate Halloween
even harder without any domestic sociocultural repercussion. Until then,
Hong’s account remains highly relevant and current.
While The Birth of Korean Cool is a brilliant way of educating
cultural novices about Korea and its culture, it may have offered only
marginal perspectives for (pop) cultural connoisseurs. But, all said and
done, the author has launched a useful discourse on nationalism and
‘cool’.
4
Markets, Globalization & Development Review, Vol. 1 [2016], No. 2, Art. 7
http://digitalcommons.uri.edu/mgdr/vol1/iss2/7
DOI: 10.23860/MGDR-2016-01-02-07
References
Frank, Thomas (1997), The Conquest of Cool. The University of Chicago
Press: Chicago.
Hong, Euny. (2014), The birth of Korean Cool: how one nation is
conquering the world through pop culture. Picador: New York.
Nancarrow, Clive and Pamela Nancarrow, (2007), “Hunting for Cool
Tribes,” in Cova, Bernard, Robert V. Kozinets and Avi Shankar,
(Eds.), Consumer Tribes, Butterworth-Heinemann, Oxford, UK, pp.
129-143.
Said, Edward W. (1979), Orientalism. Vintage, New York.
USA Today (2012), “Gangnam Style in White House? Oh no, not there,
too!” November 6.
Zizek, Slavoj (2009), The Plaque of Fantasies. Verso, London.
5
Hong: Book Review: Korean Cool
Published by [email protected], 2016
Markets, Globalization & Development Review
2016
Euny Hong, The Birth of Korean Cool (2014)
Soonkwan Hong
Recommended Citation
Euny Hong, The Birth of Korean Cool (2014)
Soonkwan Hong
Keywords
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