Radio Interview on Korean Cosmetic Surgery Tonight, 7pm

(Source)

Tonight at 7pm I’ll be on Busan e-FM’s Let’s Talk Busan again, this time talking about Korean beauty standards and cosmetic surgery. You can listen on the radio at 90.5, or online here (please note that you’ll have to download Windows Media Player 10 first), and I’ll add a link to the archived version once it becomes available.

Sorry to those of you who tuned in 2 weeks ago, only to hear me speak for just a couple of minutes in total: 7 guests was far too many. But I’m happy to report that there’ll just be 3 of us this time!

Korean Gender Reader

(Source)

A poster for Papa (파파; 2012), a rare Korean movie about a genuinely multicultural family. For a review, see YAM Magazine here.

Announcements

Actresses! The Gwangju Vagina Monologues 2013! The Search Begins (KoreaMaria)

KUMFA is looking for three volunteers to babysit while moms are receiving barista training (Tales of Wonderlost)

Seoul’s LGBT Film Festival is Traveling [to other cities]! (The Kimchi Queen)

Women’s Self-defense Classes in Busan (Busan Haps)

2012 Manhwa Art Exhibition : The Colour of Change at Korean Cultural Centre UK (London Korea Links)

Body Image, Health

Destination: BK Plastic Surgery Museum (Travel Wire Asia)

KARA member Nicole’s serious diet regimen attracts attention (Allkpop)

Embracing My Monolids: How I Learned To Work With What I’ve Got (Mochi Magazine)

Seoul schools cracking down on students’ hair length (The Hankyoreh)

Is consumer nationalism relevant today? (The Korea Herald)

Why Barbie Stumbled in China and How She Could Re-invent Herself (Forbes)

Pic of the day: A quick vocabulary lesson in Chinese fashion buzzwords (Ministry of Tofu)

Censorship, Media

The ROK Government’s War on Porn (Idiots’ Collective)

Crime

‘5 million robbery, theft cases unreported in 2011’ (The Korea Times)

Police searching for suspect after English teacher sexually assaulted by taxi driver in Gwangju (The Marmot’s Hole)

Abusive father sentenced to prison (The Hankyoreh)

Korea’s new recreational drug problem. The “milk shot.” (Korea Law Today)

Dating, Relationships, Marriage

Dating Korean guy – the clash of prejudices (Loving Korean)

For better luck in life and love, some Koreans change their names (The Korea Times)

Four Lame Reasons Why Western Women Won’t Date Chinese Men (Speaking of China)

‘Asian Playboy’: You Know You Want to Be One (Radical Ramblings)

Education, Parenting, Demographics

Korean mother trying to get her kid back after English teacher husband runs away to America with child (The Marmot’s Hole)

Chinese think tank urges end to one-child policy (Asian Correspondent)

Elderly Chinese coming down with the “urbanization blues” (Want China Times)

A declining Japan loses its once-hopeful champions (The Washington Post)

Asia’s Competition for Brides (Asia Sentinel)

For Asians, School Tests Are Vital Steppingstones (The New York Times)

The politics of ageing in South Korea (My Sinchew)

Singer of mixed ethnicity founds school for multicultural children (The Hankyoreh)

Should the Adoption Tax Cut be Renewed? (Tales of Wonderlost)

Divorcing couples with children to get mandatory education (Korea Joongang Daily)

30 percent of SNU postgrads can’t study because of excessive tasks demanded by supervisors (Human Rights Monitor)

Economics, Politics, Workplaces, Ladygate

Korean Male Union & Sexual Harassment 남성연대와 성희롱 (Korean Gender Cafe)

Opaque, top-down system leaves some expats bitter (The Korea Herald)

Koreans Don’t Want Male Nurses, Men Rejected from Nursing Schools (Human Rights Monitor)

Issue of Temporary Workers a Hot Potato Topic (Human Rights Monitor)

GM Korea commits to goal of 25% female workforce by 2015 (Korea Joongang Daily)

Samsung now hires more women, underprivileged (Korea Joongang Daily)

The Korean gender equality myth (Korea Joongang Daily)

Despite facing some inequality, women worldwide rate their well-being nearly the same as men (Deseret News)

Gangnam Style

Gangnam Style Is Now the Third Most Popular YouTube Video Ever. Here Are Numbers 1 and 2. (The Atlantic)

China, South Korea: Gangnam Style in Chinese Universities (Global Voices)

Gangnam jockeying for center of ‘hallyu’ tourism (The Korea Times)

‘Glee’ Goes ‘Gangnam Style’ (Korea Realtime)

Why PSY? (Big Hominid’s Hairy Chasms)

“Gangnam Style” creates tourism boom for Korea (Brand Republic)

Gangnam Style exposes Seoul’s folly (FT)

Riding the Korean Wave From ‘Gangnam Style’ To Global Recognition (Global Asia)

Psy’s follow up song to “Gangnam Style” postponed (Allkpop)

LGBT, Sexuality

Cops looking at Japanese websites on Korean prostitution (The Marmot’s Hole)

Imbalance of Power and Rape in the Korean Gay Community (Korean Gender Cafe)

[Special reportage- part III] Runaways’ prostitution (The Hankyoreh)

[Special reportage- part IV] Runaways live with the pain of rape (The Hankyoreh)

Gay Celebrity Tweets Halloween Party Photos, Netizens Argue (Korea BANG)

One woman’s controversial campaign to legalize prostitution in China (The Economist)

Coming out in the countryside (Seeing Red in China)

Taiwan Gay Pride Draws Thousands Pushing For Same-Sex Marriage (The Huntington Post)

The Most Influential LGBT Asian Icons (The Huntington Post)

Miscellaneous

Rise of the Tiger Nation (The Wall Street Journal)

UN body recommends alternative to military service (The Hankyoreh)

Beautiful Defectors: An Exploration of South Korea’s “Now on My Way to Meet You” (Sino-NK)

One in nine defector women work in tea houses, bars (The Marmot’s Hole)

Tackling the Myth of the ‘Super-Asian’ (Scene Asia)

Is Ladies’ Paradise (of consumerism) a Man’s Creation? (Korean Gender Cafe)

Pop Culture

“No sluts allowed in dramaland?” Yoochun’s fans demand firing of his co-star (Dramabeans)

Bad Girls Do It Well: Policing Korea’s Idols, Part I (Mixtapes and Liner Notes)

TV Hosts Too Sexy For Morning Show, Netizens Disagree (Korea BANG)

Cloud Atlas under fire for casting white actors in ‘yellowface’ makeup (The Guardian)

50 Shades of Racism: Cloud Atlas Yellowface (Asianaut)

Variety As a Source of Controversy: What Gives? (Seoulbeats)

How big is Iron Man 3’s “Fu Manchu” problem? (io9)

What’s Happened to DSP Media? (Seoulbeats)

NU’EST detained because of their fans (new levels of obsession unlocked!) (Enewsworld)

K-pop and Escaping Real Life (Seoulbeats)

With Suzy as JYP’s sole breadwinner, is JYP at risk of losing their ‘Big 3’ title? – Basically a Suz (Omona They Didnt!)

Why Do You Like K-Pop? (The Atlantic Wire)

The K-pop Formula: Cute or Sexy, Pick Your Poison (Seoulbeats)

K-Pop Film Shortlisted for Amsterdam Docu Awards (The Chosun Ilbo)

Solbi reveals how she proved it wasn’t her in alleged sex tape (Allkpop)

Twitter: where idols publicize private matters (Angry K-pop Fan)

On the T-Ara Scandal: Look out, kid, they keep it all hid (Frank Kogan)

Cultural Appropriation in J-pop (J-Popping)

Big in Japan: J-Pop, by Canadians (Scene Asia)

Social Problems

Half a million disabled suffer for 12 hours a day (The Hankyoreh)

Three Teenage Girls Jump to Their Death in Busan (Busan Haps)

Experts call for overhaul of system to assist the disabled (The Hankyoreh)

South Korea: Need to show more commitment to improve its human rights record (Human Rights Monitor)

Revised rules restrict migrant workers’ rights to choose jobs (The Hankyoreh)

Hospital banned from providing free medical care to the poor (The Hankyoreh)

(Links are not necessarily endorsements)

“The less you wear, the bigger the discount”

(Sources, edited: left, right)

“Want to talk third wave feminism, you could cite Ariel Levy and the idea that women have internalized male oppression. Going to spring break at Fort Lauderdale, getting drunk, and flashing your breasts isn’t an act of personal empowerment. It’s you, so fashioned and programmed by the construct of patriarchal society that you no longer know what’s best for yourself. A damsel too dumb to even know she’s in distress.”

Chuck Palahnuik, Snuff (2008)

Via Genderly Speaking, a typically provocative quote from Palahnuik to ponder. Not least, when you’ve just translated today’s article, about a clothes company offering discounts to customers for wearing mini-skirts and hot-pants.

Cancelled for being too lewd, I think the event should have gone ahead, and not just because I wasn’t all that impressed by Levy’s Female Chauvinist Pigs (2005) either. Rather, it’s mainly because I completely reject the notion of any woman— or man—as a mere unthinking pawn of the patriarchy. Also, heavily promoted by the media, there’s already a huge demand for such revealing clothes, so this event stood out only for being more explicit than most.

While there are legitimate issues of sexual objectification that can be raised in light of that, another problem is that the writer of the article (or the parties involved—it’s unclear) implies that it was the “sexual provocation” or “sexual suggestiveness” (선정성) that was the greatest concern. Whether she was talking about the clothes or the event as a whole though, is a little vague, but if the former then I imagine that many women would take offense at the implication that they should never wear revealing clothes? (Source, right)

Had the event gone ahead as planned though, I do realize that it would have been just as empowering and tasteful as, say, a wet t-shirt competition. (Seriously, I’m wincing at the thought of lecherous cheering and the flash of cameras as customers are revealed to have over 30cm of skin showing above their knees.) Also, even if this did all happen a month before the first Slutwalk in Toronto, and 4 months before Korea’s own, it was still disappointing that the company representative only offered platitudes in defense of the event.

Is it hypocritical of me to intellectually support such an event, but — were they old enough to attend — hope that my own daughters would avoid it like the plague? Or merely honest? Or both?

Sigh. Like Peggy Orenstein explains in the first chapter of Cinderella Ate My Daughter (2011), sons sound so much easier to raise!

“벗는 만큼 세일” 의류업계 ‘막장’ / Just Typical For The Clothing Industry: “The less you wear, the bigger the discount”

코오롱인더스트리 이벤트 ‘성 상품화’ 논란…결국 행사 취소 / Kolon Industries event leads to sexual objectification controversy, is ultimately cancelled

Consumer Times, 9 March 2011, by Choi Min-hye (최미혜), choimh@consumertimes.net

코오롱인더스트리가 최근 치마길이에 따라 옷 값을 깎아주는 행사를 기획한 가운데 선정성 논란이 일자 다급히 취소하는 촌극을 벌여 소비자들의 눈살을 찌푸리게 하고 있다.

While planning an event in which customers would receive discounts depending on how high their mini-skirts were, Kolon Industries abruptly cancelled it in light of the controversy over its sexual provocation and the [anticipated] negative reaction from consumers.

참여자들의 과다 노출과 같은 부작용을 우려하는 목소리와 함께 ‘성상품화’라는 지적도 나와 행사를 예정대로 강행하기는 무리라는 업체 측의 판단이 작용했을 것이라는 분석이다.

As voices of worry were raised about the sexual objectification and such side effects as participants’ sexual objectification, the company judged that to go ahead with the event as planned would be unwise.

(Source)

◆ 할인권 걸고 ‘여성 노출’ 부추겨? / Encouraging Women to Expose Their Bodies via Discount Coupons

코오롱인더스트리는 오는 13일 자사 패션 브랜드 매장인 ‘조이코오롱’에서 길이가 짧은 하의를 입은 고객들에게 제품 할인권을 증정하는 ‘하의실종 종결자를 찾아라’ 이벤트를 진행키로 했다 돌연 취소했다.

Kolon Industries abruptly cancelled an event titled “Who has the shortest?” that was to be held on the 13th at one of their stores, in which customers would have been offered discounts on clothes like hot-pants or mini-skirts if they arrived already wearing really short ones.

연예계를 중심으로 유행처럼 번지고 있는, 하의 길이가 매우 짧은 이른바 ‘하의 실종’ 패션을 제품 할인이벤트에 접목시켰다 여론의 뭇매를 맞은 탓이다.

While the entertainment world has spread this so-called “Disappearing Lower Body” trend of wearing very short clothes, Kolon Industries was roundly criticized by the public for grafting a sales event onto it.

당초 이 업체는 행사에 참여한 고객의 무릎부터 하의까지의 길이를 재 5cm까지는 50%, 10cm까지는 60%, 20cm는 70%, 30cm가 넘으면 90% 할인 쿠폰을 제공하겠다는 계획이었다. 다리 노출을 많이 할수록 옷 값을 더욱 깎아준다는 얘기다.

The intention of the company was to offer customers a 50% discount on clothes if they arrived exposing 5cm of their legs (from their knees), 60% for 10cm, 70% for 20cm, and 90% for 30cm. Or in other words, the more they exposed their legs, the greater the discount.

행사에 참여키로 예정돼 있던 이 회사 의류 브랜드는 ‘헤드’, ‘쿠아’, ‘쿠론’ 등이다. 헤드는 스포츠브랜드지만 쿠아와 쿠론은 각각 여성복, 핸드백 등 액세서리 전문 브랜드다. 행사의 주요 타깃이 여성이라는 분석이 가능하다.

Clothing brands that planned to participate in the event were Head, QuaCouronne, and so on. While Head is a sports brand, Qua and Couronne sell women’s clothes and handbags and accessories respectively. Women were clearly the target of the event.

일각에서는 국내 대표 의류업체가 할인권을 내세워 여성의 노출을 부추긴다는 곱지 않은 시선이 쏟아져 나왔다.

(Source)

Some people are critical of the famous national company for planning an event that will encourage women to expose themselves.

코오롱인더스트리는 선정성 논란은 ‘기우’에 불과하다며 패션 트랜드를 반영한 행사라는 사실을 강조했다.

[But] Kolon Industries emphasized that to describe this event as sexual provocation is misguided, as it merely reflects current fashion trends.

이 회사 관계자는 “다른 업체에서 (하의실종 종결자 이벤트를) 하면 문제가 될 수 있겠지만 우리는 패션회사”라며 “패션업계에서 핫 이슈인 ‘하의 실종’ 패션을 깜짝 할인행사에 접목시킨 것”이라고 해명했다. 선정성 논란 등 행사의 부정적 효과는 이미 기획단계에서 내부적으로 논의됐다는 부연이다.

A company representative explained “If other [non-clothing] companies had hosted an event like this, it would have been a problem, but we are a fashion company.” Also, that “possible reactions like controversy about sexual provocation were anticipated and already taken into account before deciding to host the event.”

(Sources: left, right)

◆ “패션업계 ‘핫 이슈’ 행사에 접목 시킨 것”…결국 이벤트 취소 / In the end the event was cancelled

이어 이 관계자는 “평소 소비자들이 입고 다니는 반바지나 치마를 입어도 할인권을 받을 수 있다”며 “하의를 최대한 짧게 입고 오라는 취지는 아니다”라고 강조했다.

The representative added “Customers that wore normal-length shorts and skirts would also have been able to receive discounts, so the intention was not to encourage them to wear as short clothes as possible.”

“과열 경쟁 등으로 지나치게 노출이 심한 옷을 입은 참가자가 등장하면 문제가 되지 않겠냐”는 기자의 질문에는 “상황에 따라 대처하겠다”고 두루뭉술하게 답했다. 사진촬영도 막지 않겠다는 입장이어서 현장 단속이 사실상 전무한 것 아니냐는 추측이 나온다.

When asked by a reporter if people wearing too revealing clothing [in order to get a bigger discount] would be a problem, the representative replied “We don’t anticipate that, but will deal with any problems if and when they occur.” [However] it will be too difficult to police the event and prevent people from taking pictures.

이 관계자는 “기본적으로 신분증을 지참한 성인남녀만 참가할 수 있도록 했지만 행사 자체는 모두에게 공개된다”며 “(지나친 노출 등) 누가 봐도 문제가 될 상황이 발생하면 현장에서 해결할 것”이라고 말했다.

The representative also said that “the event will be open to the public, but only adults (we will check IDs) will be allowed to participate,” and again that “we will deal with any problems of excessive exposure if and when they occur.” (source, right)

업체 측의 해명에도 불구하고 ‘선정성 논란’은 수그러들지 않았다. 결국 이 업체는 문제의 행사를 열지 않기로 입장을 선회했다. 소비자들의 반응은 냉담했다.

Despite these explanations, the controversy about the sexual provocation didn’t die down. In the end, the company decided not to hold the event in question. But consumers’ feelings about it are still cool.

한 소비자는 “결국은 짧은 치마를 입고 와야 옷을 싸게 살 수 있다는 것 아니냐”며 “성 상품화에 대한 논란도 많은데 코오롱인더스트리가 꼭 이런 행사를 기획했어야 했는지 모르겠다”고 지적했다.

One consumer complained that “Why would we have to come to the store in high mini-skirts in order to receive the discount,” and wondered “why did Kolon Industries plan such event when sexual objectification is such a controversial issue?”

또 다른 소비자는 “의류업체에서 유행 아이템을 반영한 행사는 개최할 수 있다”면서도 “다만 행사 내용이 지나치게 선정적으로 비춰지면 소비자들이 거부감을 느끼지 않겠냐”고 말했다.

Another consumer said “A company can certainly hold an event that reflects current fashion trends,” but “if it is too sexually provocative, won’t people reject that?”

한편 코오롱그룹 모기업인 코오롱인더스트리는 ‘캠브리지멤버스’, ‘헤드’ 등의 브랜드로 유명한 패션 전문기업이다.

The Kolon Group, the parent company of Kolon Industries, is well known for fashion brands like Cambridge Members and Head (end).

Update — Via this blog, a video promoting the event:

Related Posts:

Sex and Gender Stereotypes in Korean Advertising

Thanks to the students at Dongseo and Pusan National University for being such great audiences last week, and here is the presentation as promised. Sorry that the animations don’t work in the online version, but there weren’t too many.

For regular readers, unfortunately the slides may make little sense in themselves, but I’m happy to elaborate on any of them if you’re interested. The purpose of the first few, for instance, is not so much to illustrate the numerous subliminal sexual messages found in advertisements (although I certainly could spend an hour talking about those!), but more to make the point that nothing in an advertisement is accidental, and that it’s very naive to think otherwise. In turn, the picture of all the Korean churches is to provide a parallel to Normal Lewis’s point here, which is that if, say, my mother comes to Korea and notices all the neon crosses around, does that somehow make her a fundamentalist Christian? Or simply that there’s a lot of churches here? Likewise with noticing sexual themes in ads, no matter how perverted some people think that is.

Much better than me explaining here though, is for me to give a presentation at your own university or institution instead. Just give me a buzz — I’m pretty cheap!

Korean Gender Reader

“X FUNS cover” by Yuko Shimizu (2005; source). For more of her work, see Visual News, her website, or her Facebook page.

Body Image, Health

Convincing Women in China They’re Too Hairy (Bloomberg)

The Dark Side of K-Culture (Randomwire)

True ‘Gangnam Style’ Fashion (The Huffington Post)

A Brief History of the Double Eyelid (Korea You’re Beautiful)

South Korean girls’ obsession with double eyelid surgery as they strive to look like ‘pretty western celebrities’ (The Daily Mail)

Seoul rises as beauty destination (The Korea Herald)

Hyori looks gorgeous for Elle, but netizens focus on her “sagging” tits (Asian Junkie)

Jessica and Yunho named the ’2012 Barbie & Ken’ (Allkpop)

Censorship, Media

COOL’s Yuri Isn’t Dead, but my Faith in Korea’s Media Is (Seoulbeats)

KOCSC calls for regulations on outfits, choreography, slang, but do nothing to address real issues (Asian Junkie)

Weighing the Pros and Cons of Pre-screening MV’s (Seoulbeats)

Joking about North Korea gets young leftists thrown in jail (The Hankyoreh)

Idols and Endorsements (Seoulbeats)

Crime

Attempted rapist pleads drunkenness in appeal, gets HEAVIER sentence (The Marmot’s Hole)

Woman’s biting off of man’s tongue deemed self-defense (The Hankyoreh; The Marmot’s Hole)

Anger as Suwon Murderer Escapes Death Penalty (Korea BANG)

Key East Entertainment manager arrested for repeated sexual assault … fucking ugh (Asian Junkie; Soompi)

Taking Advantage of Passed Out Drunk Girls, Netizens Debate (Korea BANG)

Which is on the rise? Sex crimes or media sensationalism? (The Korea Times)

Dating, Relationships, Marriage

Matchmaking industry swooning (The Korea Times)

Picture of the Day: Baby Festival (ROK Drop)

Japan Court Rejects Suit Challenging Outdated Remarriage Law (Japan Real Time)

The Basics on Dating Chinese Men, Our Perceptions, And Stereotypes (Speaking of China)

I’m a Feminist AND It’s Tradition in China? On Not Changing My Maiden Name (Speaking of China)

Education, Parenting, Demographics

SKorea: Principal under investigation for hitting students (Asian Correspondent)

Interview: In New Film, Korean Adoptees Search for Roots, Redefine Family Tree (Asia Society)

Korea – U.S. International Adoption Ornament is Racist and Ugly (Korean Gender Cafe)

Are You Effing Kidding Me? (Geek in Heels)

Japan’s Demographic Nightmare (The Diplomat)

Economics, Politics, Workplaces, Ladygate

On My War Against the Window (On Becoming a Good Korean (Feminist) Wife)

Japan’s women: Can they save the country’s economy? (BBC)

Gangnam Style

Gangnam Style: how Seoul’s most exclusive neighbourhood went global (The Guardian)

Japan’s deaf ear to Gangnam Style riles South Korea (The Telegraph; Japan Today)

Psy reaches 500 million viewers in shortest time. And Japanese Youtube users suck (The Marmot’s Hole)

Can Psy start a new Korean Wave? (Asia One)

Dennis Hong debuts a robot that dances to “Gangnam Style” (TED)

Big Trouble in Little China + Gangnam Style. John Carpenter approves (io9)

From ‘Gangnam Style’ to ‘Dartmouth Style’ (3WM)

Psy meets legendary American actress Betty White (Omona They Didn’t!)

Ai Weiwei Parodies ‘Gangnam Style,’ Confuses Pundits (Asia Society; Scene Asia)

Gangnam Style hits South Park (Gusts of Popular Feeling)

Oppa earning $60K per Vegas gig (Omona They Didn’t!)

The data behind Gangnam Style: The rise and rise of PSY (The Economist)

LGBT, Sexuality

Gay-o?!: Glee and Call Me Maybe in the classroom (Alleyways)

More elderly enjoy sex (The Korea Herald)

A rise in abortions shows Chinese students need more sexual freedom, not less (Shanghaiist)

“The true sign of rough economy is not the weakness of the country’s exports industry, or the difficulty fresh college graduates face in landing a decent job, but rather when a 73 year old woman gets arrested on prostitution charges.” (The Japan Daily Press)

Reading List: Toward a Queer Korean American Diasporic History (The Kimchi Queen)

The King and the Clown’s Love Story (Seoulbeats)

Everything you wanted to know about sex in China, but were afraid to ask (Seeing Red in China)

Japan allows male-to-female transgender children to attend school as “female students” (ILDA)

If anyone ever tells you homosexuality was brought to Korea by the West… (The Kimchi Queen)

A look at prostitution among teen runaways (Gusts of Popular Feeling)

Miscellaneous

Study: female N. Korean defectors suffer depression, sexual abuse (Yahoo! Korea; The Hankyoreh)

Female athletes’ rights on radar as stars multiply (Korea Joongang Daily)

Rain Under Fire For Special Military Treatment (MTVK)

Seoul Fashion Week S/S2013 off to a Running…Fumble (Yahae!; Scene Asia)

The Story of Nobel Peace Prize Nominee Geum-Soon Yoon, A Woman Farmer (The Next Women)

Pop Culture

We’re famous for not having talents, though (Frank Kogan)

The Pre-debut Touch (Seoulbeats)

More thoughts on the question of SM trainees (Angry K-pop Fan)

Counterpoint: Reasons I’d Want to be a K-Idol (Seoulbeats)

K-pop’s ‘Music Factory’ Exports Knock on America’s Door (Asianaut)

— New York-Based K-pop Academy Scandal Put on Blast by Local News (MTVK)

Social Problems

Steep increase in income inequality since 1990s (The Hankyoreh)

(Links are not necessarily endorsements)

Quick Hit: CNN on Saseng Fans

(Source)

A good introduction to saseng (사생) fans by Collette Bennett at CNN, and I’m not just saying that because I get a mention towards the end(!). But if anyone’s confused by the connections I make to the Korean advertising industry and celebrity endorsements though, please see here for links to many posts and articles I’ve written about the subject.

Also, for related reading, see here for a discussion of the article at a JYJ fansite (they’re mentioned in the article), Asian Junkie for “Korean Executive Says K-Pop Fans Are A Cult + The Fandom Scares An American Journalist,” and XX Factor for “Your Pop-Culture Obsession Is Not a Sickness.”

p.s. Apologies to Colette if it’s my fault (I made the same mistake in my email), but it’s sa (“a” as in “hat”) seng (“e” as in “pet”), not “saesang” (pronounced “say-seng”) as reported in the article. Or is that some Seoul variation that I’m unaware of?

Radio Interview Tonight, 7pm

Tonight at 7pm I’ll be on Busan e-FM’s Let’s Talk Busan again, this time talking about bans on alcohol consumption on Korean campuses, and then Korean weddings. You can listen on the radio at 90.5, or online here (please note that you’ll have to download Windows Media Player 10 first), and I’ll add a link to the archived version once it becomes available.

Sorry in advance for my voice (I’m still recovering from a cold), and I should finally be able to catch up with comments and emails tomorrow!

Korean Gender Reader

(Source: Stuff No One Told Me, via My Journal)

Sorry for the slow posting everyone: I’ve had a bad cold for 3 days. But I’m nearly better :)

Announcements

Film Screening: Sa Bangji/사방지, Korean Queer Archive, Friday 26 October (The Kimchi Queen)

Body Image, Health

Angry Little Asian Girl pokes fun at the Asian stereotype (Mochi Magazine)

Beware of Image Changes (Seoulbeats)

On Our Radar: DVF and China (Thick Dumpling Skin)

Music Video Lessons: Ailee’s “I Will Show You” teaches us that it’s okay to be an asshole (Asian Junkie)

Girls’ Generation, SECRET & more reveal their diet meal plans (My Journal)

Roundtable: Picture Perfect (Seoulbeats)

Modesty in Australia vs. China (Speaking of China)

Hong Kong woman dies after shady ‘beauty’ treatment intended for cancer patients (Jezebel)

Censorship, Media

Erroneous report of the murder of COOL’s Yuri basically sums up the state of the Korean media (Asian Junkie)

Media manages to make false story of COOL’s Yuri’s murder worse by outing victim’s details (Asian Junkie)

40 Months for stealing Korean broadcasts (The Marmot’s Hole)

This year’s collection of foreign teacher cartoons (Gusts of Popular Feeling)

More cartoons full of needles and gropers (Gusts of Popular Feeling)

Why not the Corea? (Expat Hell)

YG Entertainment & Lee Michelle may be having issues, so let’s invent narratives! (Asian Junkie)

South Korea: Professor Acquitted in Obscenity Case (The New York Times)

Bias Tracker: Why does allkpop trash certain events but not others? (Asian Junkie)

Trending: China Skepticism (Seeing Red in China)

Crime

Alarming Rise in Sex Crimes Committed by Teens (The Chosun Ilbo)

Park Geun-hye pledges to expand police force to bolster public safety (The Korea Times)

It’s Not Easy Being a Yakuza Boss, Part 1 (Japan Subculture Research Center)

Dating, Relationships, Marriage

Black and Asian Couple, Lily and James’s love story (Facebook Page)

10 examples of how lovers match their outfits in South Korea (MSN Now)

Why Korean Men Marry Foreign Women (The Chosun Ilbo)

Feeling Sexy as a Mom (Geek in Heels)

Asian Women “Too Tempting” To Husbands/Boyfriends? Please (Speaking of China)

Ask the Yangxifu: My Chinese Boyfriend Doesn’t Express His Feeings (Speaking of China)

Education, Parenting, Demographics

Spending the Last Year as a Teenager Outside of School (ILDA)

Is Corporal Punishment Good or Bad? (Koreabridge)

On Getting Behind in the Parenting Game (On Becoming a Good Korean (Feminist) Wife)

ExamiNation: A short documentary (Lost in Traffic Lights)

Economics, Politics, Workplaces, Ladygate

Korean Professor Uses Twitter to Critcise Online Misogyny Trend (Korea BANG)

Cook, clean, and be pretty (The Korea Times)

Seniority-based Promotions being Replaced by Merit-based Promotions in Korea (The Korea Law Blog)

‘Testosterone is the problem’ [in the finance industry] (The Korea Times)

Cracks in the Asian glass ceiling (Business Without Borders)

Feminist Feels Pity For Men in Continued Online Misogyny Debate (Korea BANG)

“I’d rather sell my c*nt than my paintings”: Women artists’ position in China 20 years ago and today (The F-word)

The All-China Women’s Federation, propping up patriarchy since 1949 (Shanghaiist)

It’s easier for Chinese women to become astronauts than members of the Standing Committee (Shanghaiist)

China’s ‘Leftover’ Women (The New York Times)

Powerful Chinese men still straight pimpin’, all about the bitches (Shanghaiist)

Gangnam Style

Why ‘Gangnam Style’ Didn’t Catch Fire Instantly in China and Japan (Asianaut)

Gangnam Style out of the most viewed music chart due to YouTube changes (Omona They Didn’t!)

How YouTube Just Screwed “Gangnam Style” [Update] (Kotaku)

Should We Be Scared of Gangnam Style? (Seoulbeats)

History

Cut your hair or go to jail (The Hankyoreh)

LGBT, Sexuality

Interview with Harry: Being gay is nice because I don’t have to deal with aegyo (The Kimchi Queen)

Chinese sex fair shows how prudishness and liberation sit side-by-side (The Guardian)

K. Will’s New Single is Fantastic (The Kimchi Queen)

Reaction to Seoulbeats Review of K.Will’s Please Don’t music video 케이윌 이러지마 제발 (Korean Gender Cafe)

— The Shifting Terrain of Sex in China (Scene Asia)

Reading List: KoreAm Journal- The Queer Issue (The Kimchi Queen)

Director set to marry his boyfriend (Korea Joongang Daily)

How to come out to a Korean friend (Lost in Traffic Lights)

Miscellaneous

My Korean identity: Michael Hurt (Groove Magazine)

The 정 Challenge (Gord Sellar)

Pop Culture

Unpopular Opinion: Enough with the Aegyo Bashing! (Seoulbeats)

The Five Faces Of E.via (Frank Kogan)

Working hypothesis on appropriation in pop culture: response to Occupied Territories (Occupied Territories)

A Response to Occupied Territories (Frank Kogan)

K-Pop Boot Camp: Video (Nightline)

The grim reality behind the rise of the entertainment market (Omona They Didn’t!)

Video: K-Pop Group 2NE1 Discuss Breaking Into the U.S (Wall Street Journal, Forbes, MTVK)

Are Lost Foreigners a Lost Case in Variety? (Seoulbeats)

Why would anyone sign up with SM Entertainment? (Angry K-pop Fan)

Perspectives: K-pop in Japan (And a Bit About the World) (Seoulbeats)

Dear Kpop Music Industry: Why is it so hard to find out the director of a video? (YAM Magazine)

Social Problems

Daegu parents seek solution to student suicides (The Hankyoreh)

Court Bans Sign Language Interpreters (Human Rights Monitor)

A Few Things to Realize About Bullying (Gord Sellar)

(Links are not necessarily endorsements)

Korean (Movie) Censors in Retreat?

(Sources, edited: left, right)

With so much attention on restrictive censorship in K-pop these days, it’s easy to overlook how much standards in movies have actually been relaxed in recent years. See my latest column in Busan Haps for more information, especially if you’ve never heard of Shortbus before…

But please let me reiterate here though, that the freedom to show more sex and nudity in popular culture is just one aspect of becoming a more sexually liberal society. For sure, it’s a step in the right direction, and can have positive knock-on effects, just like the first kiss in a Korean ad in 2009 lifted the taboo on PDA for a lot of young couples for instance. (Yes, only anecdotal; but prove me wrong). But on the other hand, with the (re)criminalization of abortion by the Lee Myung-bak administration, recent attempts to limit access to the contraceptive pill, and the continued stigmatization of single mothers, you could reasonably argue that Korea is really just as sexually conservative as ever. No matter how much T&A you can see on the silver screen now, and which is often (usually?) just for financial reasons anyway.

In short, it’s complicated. Anyone that’s been here more than a couple of years, what impressions do you get? And how do you think things will change after the elections?

Interview for Radiowa Trójka

(Source)

For any Polish speakers amongst you, I was interviewed about K-pop, sexual objectification, and — of course — Gangnam Style by Radiowa Trójka the weekend before last. Check me out in translation in section 3 here, and let me say again how nice it was to meet reporters Katarzyna Borowiecka and Marcin Pospiech, who look like they’ve produced quite a comprehensive show! :)

Korean Gender Reader

(While you were sleeping 10 by Shin Sun Mi, 2011. Source)

As I missed last week’s KGR, I decided to add last week’s links here too. Ending up with roughly one hundred and thirty of them though, rest assured I won’t ever be doing that again!

Announcements

Factory Girl Literature: Sexuality, Violence and Representation in Industrializing Korea Presentation by Ruth Barraclough, 4-5:30pm, Monday October 22 2012, University of Minnesota

BOOb Crawl : 붑 투어, Saturday October 13, Itaewon 9pm (Bras for a cause)

The Sae Gil Womens Shelter Charity Drive (Busan Haps)

Body Image, Health

Defending My Daughters from the Media/Fashion-Industry Complex (Thick Dumpling Skin)

SECRET’s Hyosung asks portal sites to edit her weight (Omona They Didn’t!)

Shin So Yul of ‘Reply 1997′ reveals her weight loss story on ‘Strong Heart’ (Allkpop)

More Men Opt for Plastic Surgery (Korea Realtime; Jezebel)

— Vignettes on Weight-Loss: 1, 2, 3 (My Journal)

Gap in Receiving Health Care Services (Human Rights Monitor)

Diabetes Creates More Stress for Married Korean Women (Newswise)

Breast cancer quadruples in 15 years (The Korea Herald)

Is Korea the most beauty obsessed country? (Whatawaygook)

Dr. Wang Shuping: How I Discovered the HIV Epidemic and What happened to me Afterwards (Seeing Red in China)

Cosmetic surgery bookings surge over the holiday week (Want China Times)

Censorship, Media

Can the Government Stop the Objectification of Minors in K-pop? (Seoulbeats)

“Previewing” MVs (Angry K-pop Fan)

Banned: Is the KMRB’s Intervention a Good Idea? (MTVK)

JYJ’s Xia Junsu Denied Coverage From SBS? (MTVK)

The National Para Games apologizes to JYJ’s Junsu and his fans (Omona They Didn’t!)

K-Data Blackout: A Necessary Measure? (Seoulbeats)

YG Disappointed in KBS Review Standards for G-Dragon (Soompi)

Psy’s “Right Now” and 2PM’s “Hands Up” cleared of previous ban (Allkpop)

MOGEF Gives Second Chances to Banned Tracks (MTVK)

Appeal by 8 Members of Tajinyo Rejected and Declared Guilty Ending Tablo′s Controversy (Enewsworld)

Media reliance on Naver growing concern (The Korea Herald)

Don’t believe the 하이프 (The Marmot’s Hole)

Asia Institute Seminar with Robert McChesney “Korean Media in Comparative Perspective” (Korea: Circles and Squares)

Why is Lee Min Jung considered a victim in her relationship with Lee Byung Hun? Netizens! (Asian Junkie)

Asia Institute Seminar with Noam Chomsky: “The Problem of the Media in Korea” (Korea: Circles and Squares)

Korea: Wired (AlJazeera English Video)

Crime

New crime stats for teachers, both Korean and foreign (Gusts of Popular Feeling)

On-street questioning revives after a series of sex crimes (Human Rights Monitor)

Korean police crack down on men who hit their foreign wives (Asian Correspondent)

Convicted rapist claims he was treated unfairly because of his nationality (The Marmot’s Hole)

For Whom Does the Death Penalty Exist? (Human Rights Monitor)

Hawaii job offer becomes a nightmare for women (Korea Joongang Daily)

Dating, Relationships, Marriage

Korean girl seeks fake apartment to fool protective parents (Asia News Network)

BIFF Movie Review: In Another Country (Busan Haps)

Familiar ad trope: Pairing white men and Asian American women (Tales of Wonderlost)

Uzbek Wife Married to South Korean Man a Hit on Korean TV (KoreaBANG)

Seeking: Attractive Asian male. Why you’ll never find the above on Craiglist (The Daily Pennsylvanian)

Give Us A Chance! Why You Should Date an Asian Man (The Steel Closet)

I am an Asian Woman and I Think Asian Boyfriends Are Superior (Well, Mine Is Anyway) (xoJane)

Korean lonely-hearts feel cheated by pricey matchmakers (The Korea Herald)

[Movie] “Time” (시간) by Kim Ki-duk, 2006 (Out of Korea)

Interracial Dating in China is Not Just for White Men (Speaking of China)

Education, Parenting, Demographics

Academy seeks local role models to help young Koreans (The New Zealand Herald)

School where South Korea’s dropouts flourish (BBC)

What makes Korean unwed mothers give up their children? (Ilda)

What to do with Anti-Japan Sentiments in ESL Classes? (Ask a Korean!)

The plight of abandoned Korean babies (The Marmot’s Hole)

Foreign schools show Korea’s social divide (The Korea Herald)

1 in 3 students at Seoul National University is a binge drinker (The Marmot’s Hole)

Mekong Delta girls “eager” in learning to become wives of Korean men (Vietnam Net)

A Society Where Multicultural Students Can Live Without Difficulties (Human Rights Monitor)

Vietnamese Migrant Wives Now Outnumber Chinese (The Chosun Ilbo)

University Entrance Exams Near, Netizens Share Education Jokes (KoreaBANG)

Lack of Teachers for Students with Disabilities (Human Rights Monitor)

No comment necessary. An entire class of high school students receive IV drips while cramming for exams (Ministry of Tofu)

The Unintended Consequences Of China’s One-child Policy (io9)

Economics, Politics, Workplaces

New generation quits boring jobs quickly: Report (Korea Joongang Daily)

SKorea: Elite schools still dominate national prosecutors’ office (Asian Correspondent)

Leaving the Chaebol (Korea Realtime)

Women in finance cut off from executive posts (Korea Joongang Daily)

Young Koreans: Give Us Freedom, Not Mortgages (Korea Realtime)

Busan vs. Seoul (Meet me at the Wall)

South Korean Voters Call for Longer Poll Hours (Global Voices)

Women in China Face Rising University Entry Barriers (The New York Times)

The Importance of ‘Face’ for Chinese Jobseekers (China Real Time Report)

Japan’s Lost Art of Innovation (The Diplomat)

Gangnam Style

AAK’s definitive guide for PSY and Gangnam Style (Ask a Korean!)

Asian Stars and The USA: A History (Hootvintage)

Psy tries to trademark “Gangnam style.” Oh, and he gets wasted on stage too. (Korean Law Today)

Ten things you need to know about PSY’s Gangnam Style and Korean hip-hop (The Telegraph)

Why China Lacks Gangnam Style (The New Yorker)

Pop Music Brings a Lot More Readers than Social Science: Follow-up on ‘Kangnam Style’ (Asian Security Blog)

Gangnam Style Tops Global Charts, Korean Twitter Reactions (KoreaBANG)

Is ‘Gangnam Style’ the Peak of K-pop’s International Success? (Asianaut)

South Korea puzzles over oddball success of ‘Gangnam Style’ (Los Angeles Times)

Gangnam points to our future (Brisbane Times)

Where to Find Your Gangnam Style (Korea Realtime)

His Style Is Gangnam, and Viral Too (The New York Times)

Why BBC Radio 4 Is Wrong about “Gangnam Style” (The Unlikely Expat)

Where to Find Your Gangnam Style (Korea Realtime)

History

Power & Gender in the Early Korean State (Korean Gender Cafe)

The good daughter. The fascinating life of Park Geun-hye. (Korea Law Today)

On Gisaeng and Ginyeo (Lost in Traffic Lights)

Reading List: Male Concubinage: Notes on Late Choson Homosexuality by an American Naval Attache (The Kimchi Queen)

What’s the story behind those hats Korean men used to wear? (Lost in Traffic Lights)

LGBT, Sexuality

The Number of Room Salons and Hostess Bars at All-Time Highs In Korea (The Korea Times)

BIFF 2012: Park Chul-soo’s B·E·D (Modern Korean Cinema)

Gayspeak: Talking About 세이프 섹스 in Korean (The Kimchi Queen)

Reading List: Memento Mori and Other Ghostly Sexualities (The Kimchi Queen)

Chongqing University providing free condoms, admits students all be sexing each other (Shanghaiist)

Watch: Taiwan Pride 2012’s campaign video for same-sex marriage (Shanghaiist)

Miscellaneous

Report Reveals South Korean Soldiers Fed Poor Quality Food (KoreaBANG)

What Counts as Racially Offensive in Our Postracial World? (Korean Bodega)

Pop Culture

Factory Girls: Cultural technology and the making of K-pop (The New Yorker)

The New Yorker Rides the Hallyu Wave (SNSD-FFA)

The New Yorker examines K-pop (Korea Law Today)

K-Town Cast and K-pop Fans (Seoulbeats)

From Ikea to Korea: Writing for K-pop (Mark Russel’s Website)

Jun-jin, Joo-hyun, and The Idol Dating Game (Seoulbeats)

“An argument could be made that, historically, the vibrancy of any given pop scene can be measured by the amount of appropriation going on.” (Occupied Territories)

Tiger JK’s Sorry, But Where’s the Real Apology? (Seoulbeats)

‘Middle Powers’ Like South Korea Can’t Do Without Soft Power And Network Power (Global Asia)

K-pop’s Rooted Use of Labels: [insert title here] Idols (Seoulbeats)

“Sometimes I really don’t think K-pop labels know what they have on their hands…” (Occupied Territories)

Social Problems

What Keeps South Koreans Up at Night? (Korea Realtime)

Why does Korea interpret netizen comments as public sentiment? (Omona They Didn’t!)

Our Homeland shows family torn by N Korea-Japan relocation program (Visual Anthropology of Japan)

The lives of female runaways in Seoul, Part 2 of 6 (The Hankyoreh)

Why Koreans Are Angry: The Social Cost of Spectacular Growth (KoreaBANG)

The Good sans the Bad and the Ugly: September (Seoulbeats)

Social Workers’ Human Rights (Human Rights Monitor)

Asia Institute Seminar with Dr. Eckhard Schroeter: “Korean Social Welfare in Comparative Perspective” (Korea: Circles and Squares)

Dogani and South Korean culture’s major problems with abuse (The Unlikely Expat)

(Links are not necessarily endorsements)

Korean Sociological Image #73: The True Numbers of Korean Working Women

(Source; edited)

If recent BBC coverage is anything to go by, marriage in South Korea is like a business. It’s also becoming a bit of an explosive topic as social mobility slows down and the traditional image of the male breadwinner becomes eroded by the increasing participation of females in the labour market. Some of the most widely publicised scandals and controversies on the Korean internet seem to have been, in some way or another, due to this intensifying gender friction.

(KoreaBANG; my emphasis)

My apologies for singling out Justin at KoreaBANG, whose post is still excellent overall. And as you’ll soon see, I often make mistakes too.

But that comment I’ve highlighted? Frankly, it just infuriated me. Because even though it’s completely wrong, I seem to hear it all the time these days.

In reality, the Korean female workforce participation rate has stagnated at one of the lowest rates in the OECD ever since 1997-98, when women were overwhelmingly targeted for layoffs during the Asian Financial Crisis. Back then, the logic was that wives would be provided for by their husbands, and 20-something daughters by their fathers. And 10 years later, in the latest crisis, to a large extent this logic was reapplied, although on this occasion there was a clearer economic – not just patriarchal – logic in that women formed the bulk of irregular workers (see here, here, and here for much more information).

Or so I’ve often written. But naturally, it was difficult to find definitive statistics on that when I first reported on it three years ago. At that time, my most up to date source was my copy of Working Korea 2007, published by the Korea Labor & Society Institute. Here is my scan of page 19, which has a graph of the male and female workforce participation rate of 1970-2006:

In hindsight, although it does show a big drop in the female rate in 1997-98, it shows an equally large (even slightly larger?) drop in the male rate too. With my apologies, I’m very surprised I didn’t notice that earlier, and, although it does contradict most of the literature I’ve read about the Asian Financial Crisis, and is just from one source too, it still definitely bears further investigation.

That aside, a year later I found a source going up to 2008 (it shows a fall of 50.3% to 50.0% in 2006-2008; see below also). And today, spurred by Justin’s comment, I tried looking again, and found the following at the National Statistics Office’s website:

(Source)

The blue bars represent the economically active female population, in thousands (i.e., the first figure is 10.75 million), the pink line the female workforce participation rate. Although the choice of right scale gives the false visual impression that the rate has changed a great deal, as you can see from the numbers it has remained within a narrow band of 49% to 50.5%, last year’s rate being just lower than that of 2002. Also, clearly a 0.9% drop between 2008 and 2009 isn’t quite as big as I’ve been making out, and again is something that bears further exploration.

But still, one thing is clear: the number — well, percentage — of Korean women working has little changed in the last 15 years, and remains very very low by the standards of other developed countries. So it can not be the cause of increasing gender friction.

The perception that Korean women are making significant inroads into the Korean economy though? That’s entirely possible, and indeed I highly recommend KoreaBANG for much more on that (indeed, especially the remainder of Justin’s post), as well as many posts by Gord Sellar too (source, right).

(For more posts in the Korean Sociological Image series, see here)

Korean(?!!) Movie Review #6: Air Doll (2009)

(Source)

Starring: Bae Doo-na (Nozomi),  Itsuji Itao (Hideo), and Arata Iura (Junichi). Written and directed by Hirokazu Koreeda (original manga by Yoshiie Gōda). In Japanese with English subtitles. 126 minutes.

Less than four minutes into Air Doll, middle-aged owner Hideo has sex with the inflatable doll he’s named Nozomi, with all the crunching of flesh against plastic and washing of detachable vaginas that that implies. It’s as if director Hirokazu Koreeda was deliberately encouraging the squeamish to walk out of the theater.

It’s also ironic, as the very next scene reveals it to be a very erotic, albeit knowingly voyeuristic movie too, the camera luxuriating on Nozomi’s nude form as she magically comes to life (see the telling juxtaposition in the NSFW screenshot below; the subtitle actually refers to some dew she’s touching). She’ll proceed to spend a disproportionate amount of the next two hours topless, even for a movie about a sex-doll.

Yes, still an inflatable sex-doll, not a woman. For as she proceeds to leave Hideo’s apartment in a maid costume, and encounter a succession of sad, desperately lonely characters, her literal hollowness proves to be a poignant metaphor for all their lost, empty souls.

But she deliberately appears palpably, sensually human too, and you just can’t have it both ways. Especially in a movie that already so heavily relies on viewers’ suspensions of disbelief.

So, even if is nitpicking to wonder how she goes from learning speech and what clothes are in the morning, to getting a job at a DVD store in the evening, a scene in which a beautician covers her suddenly visible* seams with make-up is nothing but confusing and distracting. As is another when she pumps herself full of air one morning (naked, of course), yet somehow had a meal at a restaurant with co-worker Junichi the night before. And so on. Suffice to say, her new form is ambiguous, but much more human than not.

When she accidentally punctures her hand and rapidly deflates fifty minutes in then, it’s jarring, and it’s asking far too much of the viewer to pretend that she’s been nothing but a walking, talking balloon all that time.

*With the benefit of 4 viewings, the seams are visible earlier, but only in some scenes. Appearance-wise, the movie is rife with continuity errors.

Granted, Air Doll is fundamentally an allegory. But, rather than aiding it, here the confusing content simply gets in the way of the message. Koreeda, who borrowed only the initial concept from the original manga, really should have considered alternative methods of conveying it.

One possibility would be having Nozomi become fully human at the beginning of the movie and during the day, but often uncontrollably and reluctantly reverting a little, then changing back completely at night. Indeed, this is actually very similar to what happens in the first half of the movie, and then making her transformation progressively more unstable would suit the second half — and narrative as a whole — very well too.

Crucially, the nagging questions also distract the viewer from fully appreciating one of the movie’s great strengths, which is how Nozomi never really stops the innocent, childlike exploration of her new world, nor finding beauty in it. And her exquisite mimicry of its inhabitants is simply priceless.

Yet despite those, she also shows, as Tirdad Derakhshani of The Inquirer puts it, a sublime progression “from a childlike naif who plays with toddlers in a sandbox to a sophisticated woman who devours books, draws portraits, and philosophizes about life,” (my emphasis) and I’m not alone in thinking that Bae Doo-na is one of the few actresses that has the skill and versatility to pull the combination off (Tom Miles of Midnight Eye suggests Rinko Kikuchi or Hanae Kan, while Yuna at The Marmot’s Hole calls Aoi Yuu “a Bae Doo-na equivalent in Japan”).

(Source)

The practicalities of that process are that, despite everything, she soon establishes a routine of leaving for work at a DVD store once Hideo leaves, learning about the world through the strangers she meets on her breaks and/or days off, and especially by constantly asking questions of her unfazed, endlessly patient coworker Junichi, who soon starts taking her out to see the things she asks about. Finally, she has to rush home to lie passively for her “master” before he returns home, finding him increasingly repulsive, but using the time to ponder her discovery that she is/was a cheap “substitute for handling sexual desire;” to learn about love, mortality, and desire; and to determine why she found herself “with a heart [she] was not supposed to have.”

(Source)

(Minor Spoilers Begin)

But then, with the combination of a rare form of cunnilingus and strategically-placed tape, Junichi saves her from her puncture. An obvious turning point in their relationship, albeit more because Nozomi thinks she’s found a kindred spirit rather than because of their new intimacy per se (indeed, Junichi is so enigmatic that she initially thinks he is a sex doll too), unfortunately the movie, already convoluted, becomes very difficult to follow. And, crucially, not because of the depth of the message, but rather because Koreeda seems to be deliberately encouraging mistaken readings of the plot. In particular:

  • The morning after the puncture scene, the next 20 minutes show Nozomi symbolically throwing away Hideo’s pump for her, then leaving rejoicing in her freedom and liberation around the city. It very much seems as if she’s left Hideo forever…so again it’s jarring when you see her miserably by his side that evening, as per usual.
  • That last scene above is very brief, and it’s easy for it not to really register (although in fairness, it is technically there). So when you see Nozomi sneaking a look at Hideo bringing a new doll home, it appears that perhaps he’s doing so because she’s actually left him. Not, as, we’re supposed to think, that he’s put the (still fully inflated) Nozomi away in a cupboard.

And there’s many more confounding examples. Perhaps, certainly, the misreadings are just due to my own dull-wittedness, but I don’t think I’d be alone in needing two — actually three! — viewings of this movie just to figure out what the hell is going on. In contrast, Inception (2010), say, has many deep messages, but somehow I still understood the plot in that on the very first try (source, right).

In combination with obvious questions about her human or doll form then, and the problems of continuity with Nozomi’s image, this is a third red flag that points to laziness and/or arrogance on Kareeda’s part. Or alternatively, with a hat tip to Gomushin Girl’s comment in my review of Kim Ki-duk’s Samaria (2004), perhaps he simply got too caught up in his own message to think about how it might look to a less-informed audience member.

But he redeems himself with a powerful message just before the end of the movie, and one that I’m amazed that other reviewers (at least the 25+ I’ve read) didn’t pick up on

.(Major Spoilers Begin).

While, again, it’s delightful to watch Nozomi learning to be human, in the process noticing the hidden joys and beautifies of life that most of us have chosen to ignore, that’s increasingly tempered by her realization that her own purpose is nothing but to sate the sexual desires of the men around her, who do nothing to disabuse her of that notion. It’s vividly shown in the dead expression on her face when the DVD store-owner blackmails her into sex, threatening to tell Junichi about Hideo, and also partially explains why later, having finally left Hideo, she tells Junichi she’ll do absolutely anything for him.

(Source)

When he replies that he’d like to deflate and then breathe life into her again, she’s visibly shocked and — I’d say — disappointed that he’s ultimately no different from all the other men she’s met. But of course agrees, and appears to enjoy the ensuing “sex.”

Yet then, when he’s sleeping, she cuts an equivalent nozzle into his own navel, ultimately killing him from, presumably, loss of blood. But not before blowing into it herself, climbing on top of him, and unequivocally orgasming to the ensuing “conventional” sex (which, despite his tremendous pain, he’ll also do his best to actively participate in).

While it may sound minor in isolation, and I don’t want to be so glib as to take loudness, frequency, and duration of moans as a barometer for women’s sexual pleasure, it is the only moment in the entire movie she imposes her own will and/or sexuality on others, rather than being a mere, literal, receptacle for theirs. As such, It stands as a rare and very welcome final moment of defiance in the somewhat inevitable and predictable path to her coming suicide. (Update: on that last, see io9 for a curious case of life imitating art.)

(All Spoilers End)

(Source)

To the extent that it exists at all then, it is precisely here that a feminist reading of the movie could be further explored. In contrast, John Esther’s point at Jesther Entertainment that “Air Doll stands for, among other things, as a metaphor for women who are to look pretty, say nothing, stay home and wait for the patriarch to return home and breathe his breath into her lifeless a(i)rea” is true, but a bit of a dead end. As is Nick Davis’s comment at Nick’s Flicks Picks, which I thought was a misguided — and very forced — interpretation:

If you know anything about the Pacific fronts in World War II and a history of chauvinist disavowals by Japanese governments, the casting of a Korean actress as a Japanese man’s inert, unresisting erotic receptacle can’t help trigger distasteful connotations.

That aside, and in conclusion, while it’s a little harsh for Kelly Vance of East Bay Express to describe the movie as a “dreary, middlebrow allegory,” it is true that the movie is at least thirty minutes too long, many of those spent in vignettes showcasing the emptiness of the characters’ lives, while Nozomi drones on about — wait for it — how empty life is, all to the accompaniment of languid, sickly-sweet music in the background. Also, in a review at Antagony and Ecstasy that I highly recommend, Tim Brayton rightfully points out that the movie only provides observations and not actual insights, whereas plenty of Pinnochio-like movies have given both before, and with much more skill too.

(Source)

So, with the important qualification that you may need a lot of help with the plot before watching, Air Doll can a pleasant enough movie, albeit one lacking much of a vision, and inexpertly conveyed at that. Instead, think of it more as an invitation to form your own.

And, in the process, do take time to notice the superb cinematography too. For as Tom Miles at Midnight Eye Review explains, it’s set:

in one of Tokyo’s remaining shitamachi, an old neighbourhood of little independent houses, while ominous high-rises wait on the other side of the river for the aging abodes to crumble, impatient to take over the turf.

On that note, see above for my favorite location in the movie, which even someone as literal-minded as myself could appreciate!

Permanent Revolution by World Order: Japanese Robot Salarymen for Peace!

(Source)

With island disputes between China, Taiwan, Korea, and Japan so dominating the news recently, it’s nice to see something that puts a positive, optimistic spin on those relationships. Let alone one that does so by having Japanese salarymen strutting like robots around the streets of Tokyo and Seoul:

The group is World Order, a Japanese band formed by Genki Sudo, who also directed and produced the video (with choreography by Ryo Noguchi). Just the latest in a series of similar videos performed all around the world, Tofugu, a Japanese pop-culture site, describes them as “the most innovative dance and music troupe in Japan,” and adds that their appeal is not just their dancing, but also:

…the people watching them dance. They just go out in public areas for the most part, do their thing, and then leave. People walk by, look at them all confused, take video/pictures, ignore them completely, and all kinds of other hilarious things if you pay close enough attention. Try to watch and you’ll see some entertaining reactions.

See Tofugo for many examples. Meanwhile, the very cool cartoonist Jen Lee (of Dear Korea fame), whom I’m very grateful to for finding the video, has managed to find a rare translation of the lyrics too:

(Source)

A blue shine on my fingertips

As I touch the side of your pensive face

When I look up to the gray sky

A blue sky spreads out over the east sky

Keep changing

Permanent Revolution

Without stopping

Keep walking

Permanent Revolution

To a single world

Gather the accumulated lies

Keep erasing them among the pluses, without making a sound

Keep believing

Permanent Revolution

Without wavering

Keep loving

Permanent Revolution

Open your heart

Keep changing

Permanent Revolution

Without stopping

Keep walking

To a single world

Gangnam Style Minus Gangnam Style

As The Daily What put it:

It seems now that we’ve moved beyond parodies and imitation for Gangnam Style, descending into bizarre postmodern art.

Not unrelated, earlier today I saw a Klingon parody…

…and when I did, I seriously had to sit down for a moment, and just marvel at how weird, wonderful, and utterly surreal and sublime it was to be living in 2012. How could I ever have imagined that, one morning, I’d be dancing along to people dressed in Star Trek uniforms (of all things), imitating a South Korean music video, that over 320 million people had seen? Then in the same evening, staring in horrified fascination — and laughing myself silly — at another version that had no actual music?!!

Best Chuseok EVER!

(Via: My Current Insanities)

Korean Gender Reader

(“Oohlala Spouses makes best poster ever” — Dramabeans. Source)

This new theme is AWESOME, yes?^^ Have a happy Chuseok everybody!

Body Image, Health

Seoul Cosmetic Surgery Clinic Looking for (Naked) Before and After Models (The Marmot’s Hole)

Why the Rise of Asia In Fashion Isn’t As Beautiful As It Seems (Speakeasy)

Korean eunuchs reveal clues to why women live longer than men (BBC; see also Science)

What rejuvenates my vagina?!?! Not Lasers!!! (Korean Gender Cafe)

It takes hundreds of employees, thousands of hours and millions of dollars to launch a mass market lingerie line. And one blogger to take it all down. (Racebending; see also Bitch)

How do you explain the Gramscian concept of hegemony to a 10 year old? (Tales of Wonderlost)

Censorship, Media

Teen sexualization on TV faces stronger censorship (The Korea Times; see also The Korea Herald)

New Term: “White Endorsement Monkey” and “White Defamation Monkey” (Gord Sellar)

Men finally behave badly (The Korea Times)

“Unqualified foreign instructor” problem…in 1973 (Gusts of Popular Feeling)

Crime

I cannot remember a period of time in my life when I was not scared by older ahjussis (Lost in Traffic Lights)

Dating, Relationships, Marriage

Culture and Language Issues in Foreign/Korean Relationships (I’m No Picasso II)

Dating Asian Women When You’re an Asian Guy (Radical Ramblings)

Marriages between North American(?) men, Korean women top 2,000 in 2011 (The Korea Times)

Male writer and I have a Korea / dating column starting in October’s 10mag (Meet me at the wall)

What’s the REAL appeal of a Samsung or LG guy? (Dating in Korea)

SECRET’s Hyosung says her ideal type is a stalker … great (Asian Junkie)

Ask the Yangxifu: Chinese Parents Refuse to Meet Me (Speaking of China)

Why I have no female Chinese friends (Seeing Red in China)

Are Yangxifu (The Western Wives of Chinese Men) More Difficult Wives? (Speaking of China)

Education, Parenting, Demographics

Breaking the promise of universal day care (The Hankyoreh; see also Korea Joongang Daily)

Funny, sad, and revealing answers to questions from Korean students (South Korea)

Adventures in Parenting Abroad Pt. 3: The End is Just the Beginning (The Three Wise Monkeys)

“The Challenges of Korean Education in Historical Perspective” Asia Institute Seminar with Professor Michael Seth (Korea: Circles and Squares)

A Trojan Wall of Separation: The Battle Over South Korean Textbooks (Busan Haps)

South Korea to probe corruption in international high schools (Asian Correspondent)

Economics, Politics, Workplaces

Low Unemployment Rates, But No Jobs for Youths or Women (The Korea Economic Daily)

Park Geun-hye: Female President, Patriarchal Society? (Roboseyo)

Feeling the pinch: The housewives of Japan are giving less spending money to their husbands (The Economist)

Asia Institute Seminar on ‘Women in Science’ in Seoul (Korea: Circles and Squares)

Gangnam Style

The Obligatory Gangnam Style Post (Ask a Korean!)

PSY And The Acceptable Asian Man (Racialicious)

Is “Gangnam Style” a Hit Because of Our Asian Stereotypes? (Mother Jones)

Growing Up Gangnam-Style: What the Seoul Neighborhood Was Really Like (The Atlantic)

Dead horse (Liminality)

Gangnam Style’s Irony is Missed b/c of the Publicity Wave (Asian Security Blog)

On Gangnam Style (The Korea Times)

What’s so funny about Gangnam Style? (The Guardian)

Why Psy and not JYP? (The Korea Times)

A Few Things JYP Can Learn From Psy for Wonder Girls’ American Venture (Seoulbeats)

The Gangnam Phenom (Foreign Policy)

LGBT, Sexuality

A Different Color of Sexual Identity (The Yonsei Annals)

Former senior police officer: “Registered brothels needed” (The Korea Times)

Queering Korean Literature: Author and Activist Yi Gwang-su (The Three Wise Monkeys)

Beware of people asking you for 키알 / 섹알 (Hangukdrama and Korean)

Why are men so obsessed with breasts? (io9)

Reading List: Mapping the Vicissitudes of Homosexual Identities in South Korea (The Kimchi Queen)

Dirty Little Secrets: A variety of Korean Sex Links (The Marmot’s Hole)

Miscellaneous

The death of the red ink taboo in Korea (The Marmot’s Hole)

Meeting the Mannam Cult: My Korean volunteerism at an end (Travel Blog)

Crazy beautiful: Understanding the Korean mind (WND Diversions)

Pop Culture

The Korean Wave and the Question of Soft Power (Seoulbeats)

Nice Guy: Han Jae Hee Character Analysis (Idle Revelry)

“Courtship is usually portrayed (in heterosexual pairings) as something a man does; it’s an act he performs, while the woman is passive and simply receives his love. If she rejects him, it doesn’t mean he should stop, it simply means he has to try harder.”

Review: Words of Farewell Fiction by Korean female writers (Korean Modern Literature in Translation)

Revisiting the women who changed Korea with their pens (Yahoo!)

I ain’t here to make you honkies laugh! (The Marmot’s Hole)

Review: “Style” by RaNia (Mixtapes and Liner Notes)

Review: T-ara’s “Sexy Love” is the sound of the girl group in crisis, and the song’s mock-seductive chorus goes just a step too far (Occupied Territories)

Nothing like a healthy dose of fangirling (Hangukdrama and Korean)

This is why you can’t lump “Asia” together (SNSD Free For All)

How to make sure there are more “Pieta”s for the Korean film business (The Hankyoreh; see also this interview of Cho Min-soo)

(Links are not necessarily endorsements)

Open Thread: Flashback by After School

Just a quick note to let you know that in addition to my regular feature articles at Busan Haps, I now have a K-pop music column too. See page 41 of the latest issue here (scroll down to “current issue”) for my first review of After School’s Flashback, before it’s replaced next week with my second of Secret’s Poison in the October edition.

At just 200 words though (thank God for mini-albums!), unfortunately it’s difficult to say much more than the bare minimum.  So, please feel free to add any rants or raves here, and, to get the ball rolling, I think that Eyeliner is much better than the title track, and singer Nana vastly underrated by most other reviewers. But, since first writing, I’m beginning to see what people mean about Rania and Jungah complimenting each other in Timeless too, although the song itself still leaves me feeling rather empty.

Here’s all the songs in the mini-album (and the Japanese version of Rip Off), in the order I mention them in the review:

 

Related Posts:

No V-lines Required: Miss Korea in the 1960s

(Source: Munhwa Ilbo)

Alas, this brief article from today’s Munhwa Ilbo isn’t exactly a scathing critique of Korea’s body-labeling craze, and I don’t mean to imply that there aren’t much more substantial ones out there. But still, it’s good to be quickly reminded that perhaps “V-lines” aren’t as necessary as pop-culture icons would like us to think (e.g., see ZE:A in Brazil below), and I hope the photo makes it to the front page of major Korean portal sites.

See here or here for better quality versions, or here and here for pictures of the 1957 and various 1970s contestants respectively.

60년대 미스코리아는 ‘V라인 아닌 건강미’ / In the 1960s, Miss Korea Had a Healthy Beauty, not a V-line.

‘미인’의 기준은 문화와 관습에 따라 다르지만 시대에 따라서도 변합니다.

The criteria for a beautiful woman depend on time, culture, and customs.

사진을 보면 1960년 미스코리아 선발대회에 나온 여성들은 건강미가 넘쳤습니다. 당시에는 서구적인 마스크를 선호했다고 하죠. 1980년대 이후 한동안 도시형 미인이 인기를 끌었고, 요즘은 ‘V라인’의 작은 얼굴과 뚜렷한 이목구비가 대세라고 합니다. 성형미인도 많아졌고요.

If you look at this photo of the 1960 Miss Korea contest, you see women overflowing with healthy beauty, [even though] it is said that people preferred Western masks [looks?] then. [But] from the 1980s, for a while urban beauties were preferred, and these days having a V-line and distinct facial characteristics are huge trends. There are many cosmetic surgery beauties.

1957년 시작된 미스코리아 선발대회는 초창기 큰 인기를 모았습니다. 공중파 TV를 통해 전국에 생중계됐고, 수상자들은 카퍼레이드까지 하며 미를 뽐내기도 했었죠. 그러다 여성단체 등의 ‘성상품화 조장’ 반발로 2002년 이후 공중파에서는 중계를 하지 않고 있습니다.

(Source: Yufit)

Starting in 1957, from the beginning the Miss Korea contest was very popular. From being shown live on TV, to winners taking part in car parades, their beauty was shown off. However, later women’s groups denounced it as promoting sexual objectification, and from 2002 it was only allowed to be shown live on cable.

예전에는 미스코리아 선발대회를 통해 연예계로 진출하는 경우도 많았지만 요즘은 오디션 프로그램 등 연예계로 나설 방법이 다양하게 생겨났습니다. 그래서인지 대회의 인기가 예전만 못합니다.

In the past, there were many cases of Miss Korea contest participants entering into the entertainment industry through the competition, but these days there are a variety of audition programs that provide the same opportunity. Because of that, the contest can’t reach the level of popularity that it enjoyed in the past. (End.)

Update: Here’s a video of the 1981 to 2008 winners. As one of the commenters on YouTube put it, it’s interesting to see how much their faces seem to change from the late-1990s onwards.

Korean Gender Reader and TGN Meetup

(Source)

Yes, my KTX tickets and hotel are all booked. Hope to see you at Gyeongbokgung Station (경복궁), exit 3, at 6pm tomorrow! :D

Announcements

Korean Unwed Mothers Families’ Association looking for 10 volunteers to go on this year’s Chuseok camp to Yeoncheon (Tales of Wonderlost; see also What is KUMFA)

Body Image,Health

Pandora by KARA: Appropriate for Playing on City Buses? (Alleyways)

Hands, Hips, Legs and Butts: Girl Groups’ Dances (Seoulbeats)

Beautiful Genes? But ‘Idol’ Looks Good On Everyone (Seoulbeats)

G-Dragon receives attention for his womanly curves in “Crayon” MV (Allkpop; see also Occupied Territories)

Censorship, Media

Does Secret Need To Change Their Choreography? (Seoulbeats; see also What’s Your Poison and SB Exchange #25: It’s Secret Time)

Sadism, incest, bestiality, oh my! (The Marmot’s Hole; see also The Herald Voice on Facebook)

Regulation of Users Required to Use Real Name Online Abolished (Human Rights Monitor)

New Regulations on Downloading Porn Confuse Netizens (Korea BANG)

Crime

More sex offenders to be chemically castrated (The Hankyoreh)

Sexual Assault Against Children (Human Rights Monitor)

Random Stabbings in Seoul Brings Social Instability (Human Rights Monitor)

So, did banning prostitution lead to increase in sex crimes? (The Marmot’s Hole)

Sex Criminal Escapes from Jail In Daegu (ROK Drop)

Amy Arrested for Illegally Using Propofol (Omona They Didn’t!)

Foreign teacher sent to prison for molesting students (Gusts of Popular Feeling)

Dating, Relationships, Marriage

Comparing Marriage in the Middle Ages and Korea’s Choson Dynasty: 서양의 중세 초기와 조선의 결혼비교 (Korean Gender Cafe)

Marry my Asian Daughter: For all the sassified, successfully single sisters who are in constant disappointment to their loving Asian mothers

Craigslist ad (Dating in Korea)

Guy Talk: I Date Outside My Race Because My Race Doesn’t Want To Date Me (The Frisky)

Education, Parenting, Demographics

Tiger mothers in Singapore: The prime minister goes into battle against pushy parents (The Economist)

Non-traditional families on the rise in South Korea (Asian Correspondent)

Why the Korean School System Is Not Superior (New Politics)

Korean-Australian woman finds she was falsely adopted (Tales of Wonderlost)

Went to see 미쓰마마 (Bittersweet Joke), a documentary about unwed mothers in Korea (Tales of Wonderlost)

Babies’ Lead Levels: Who knew baby-proofing could reach such heights? (Shotgun Adventures)

Schools successfully experimenting with vegetarian meals (The Hankyoreh)

Multicultural students jump 5-fold over past 6 years (The Korea Times)

Economics, Politics, Workplaces

Mother’s Job Most Important Factor in Having 2nd Child (The Chosun Ilbo)

Mistreatment of Part-time Workers (Human Rights Monitor)

Nobody Told Asia About “The End of Men”: Mara Hvistendahl takes on Hanna Rosin (Foreign Policy)

Directing all my rage at Slate’s logrolling of “The End of Men” (Feminéma)

The-End-of-Men-Richer-Sex Reality Check #6 (Sociological Images)

What is Violence in the Workplace? 2-Page Guide Translated into Korean (Worksafe BC; PDF)

LGBT, Sexuality

Reading List: Korean Lesbians and Heteronormativity: From the Experiences of Six South Korean Lesbians (The Kimchi Queen)

Queer Offerings at the Busan International Film Festival (The Kimchi Queen)

Survey: Japanese school girls having less sex (Asian Correspondent)

South Korean host bars – for women (BBC)

What is a Room Salon? (Korea Law Today)

S Korea transgender show scrapped after protests (The Hong Kong Standard; Korea Joongang Daily)

Pop Culture

Koreans Have No Idea Why Americans Love Psy But They Can Learn From It (Asian Junkie)

Commentary: Psy and the Acceptable Asian Man (Init_Music)

Viral Video Gets North Korean Propaganda Treatment (The New York Times)

Korean wave and the Gangnam style (ABC Radio Australia; radio program)

Graphic: Number of views of K-pop Videos on Youtube, 2011 (SERI World)

An Ode to the Stellar Females in Variety (Seoulbeats)

Why have Korean dramas eclipsed even Mexican or Latin American serials and long-running American soaps? (Philippine Daily Inquirer)

Review: Wayfarer: New Fiction By Korean Women (Korean Modern Literature in Translation)

Social Problems

The Truth Behind Students’ Suicide (Human Rights Monitor)

September Issue: Opening the Dialogue on Suicide (KoreAm)

Runaways flee abuse at home, end up in prostitution (The Hankyoreh)

South Korea: Golden Lion Winner ‘Pieta’ Reveals Society’s Dark Side (Global Voices)

(Links are not necessarily endorsements)

For S. Korean men, makeup a foundation for success

(Source)

In The Associated Press today. Please see here if you would like a fuller explanation of my comments in it though — naturally, author Foster Klug had to miss out a great deal of what was discussed in our interview!

Update: By popular demand, here is the quintessential kkotminam commercial, from 2003:

The black-haired man is now retired soccer player Ahn Jung-hwan (안정환), the blonde actor Kim Jae-won (김재원).