Performing in “Public” Spaces in Korea and Japan—Can Anyone Do it? Or Mostly Just Men?

“Musicians’ experiences of dis/comfort, im/mobility, security and threat, as well as their coping strategies, are all gendered.”

Estimated reading time: 5 minutes. Photo by Chris Barbalis on Unsplash.

My TBR pile is glorious, and it is teetering. So, I really should have known better than to even glance at the New Book Networks feed…

Assuming I can actually find the space then, this latest, slightly pricey candidate is all due to Tuesday’s interview of Dr. Gitte Marianne Hansen and Dr. Fabio Gygi, editors of The Work of Gender: Service, Performance and Fantasy in Contemporary Japan (NIAS Press, 2022). Specifically, the section from 28:35-31:10 where Dr. Gygi talks about Chapter 6, in which his colleague, Dr. R. J. Simpkins, shares his findings from months of observing and talking to buskers and street performers near a Tokyo train station. Like me, listening will probably immediately remind you too, my beloved tribe (*hugs*), of Feminist City: Claiming Space in a Man-made World by Leslie Kern (Verso, 2020; see my review here). You also get how tempted I am right now then, as I almost seem to hear the soft serenade of  “지금 택배로 주문하면 11월 24일 출고” sweetly whispered into my ear…Oh! Aladin, you tease…

Ahem.

With no further ado then, sorry for any mistakes in my transcript of that section of the podcast below. And please don’t worry about giving offense if you’d rather jump ahead to a reviewer’s excellent summary below that instead!

“Well, I think this is a wonderful chapter, because Rob, the author, was actually playing as a street musician himself, and that’s how he entered the field, and he’s been there for quite a long time, and it’s a wonderful ethnography, and very detailed. But towards the end he realized, ‘Well, I’m only talking to men. I know a few female performers but it seems to be a very different experience for them.’ So he started to focus a little bit more on the differences, and one of the things that he really found was that it’s all about space-making.”

“So, it’s a public space, you’re exposed to the gaze of the passers-by, but as a musician or performer you have to create…you have to take this public space and turn it into something else, like a concert venue or a venue for self-expression. And this of course takes on a very strong gender dimension. So men felt very much at ease, you know…especially the more rock-type musicians who would just start to play…there would be a good vibration and people would sort of assemble. But women working as performers felt very much exposed in a very different way. Now, you have to imagine, during commuter rush hour it’s mostly men…it’s salarymen who come back from work, often in a state of inebriation, and there would be a lot of sexual harassment, there would be a lot of unwanted attention, or rather boundary-breaking attention, so people would come, they would listen to a song, and then they would try to chat you up or get close or break the sort-of boundaries that you have created. And so there was a much greater sense of vulnerability, and what he sort-of concluded from that is a public space is also to a strong degree male-coded, it’s the male gaze that defines what is happening.”

“So if you expose yourself to that, you have to be aware of the gendered dynamics of the space and so his artists chose very different and very creative strategies [to deal with those]…Reyna(?) for example performed in a mask to deflect from the fact that she was a female performer, and so it is very important to understand that this public sphere itself is gendered…not something we would normally, you know, have a good understanding of.”

These difficulties and dangers are underscored by co-editor Dr. Hansen then going on to note that this was the most difficult subject in the book for any of the contributors to research. Because, unlike with other venues and performances, the rules of engagement (and enforcement) were not set. My personal additional takeaway from that being, those rules were also more open to exploitation and abuse by those with (male) privilege.

Photo by Victoriano Izquierdoh Barbalis on Unsplash.

For the busier feminist book geek among you though, as promised here is an excellent summary of Dr. Simpkins’ chapter by Dr. Kai E. Tsao, taken from her review in Feminist Encounters:

“Simpkins observed and interviewed music performers at a Tokyo station, and his chapter demonstrates that the musicians’ experiences of dis/comfort, im/mobility, security and threat, as well as their coping strategies, are all gendered. Male musicians considered their experience, occupying and transgressing in public space, as performing their authentic self and self-realisation. This sentiment was not shared by the female musicians. Instead, they performed ‘charm’ and created a ‘non-threatening atmosphere’ to navigate social interactions in a station space with a predominantly male presence. Public space around the station is coded: compared to their male counterparts who ‘naturally’ hung around to interact with their supporters, female musicians were much more cautious about the risks of inviting passers-by to take an interest in their performance. This makes me wonder: how is the performance of invitation gendered? How might female musicians be perceived if they invited an audience in a space where they were ‘not supposed to be’?”

And which also makes me wonder, what are the Korean parallels? Where are those spaces?

Frankly, I can’t really think of any. In fact, the only place I ever encounter buskers and street performers at all is the main drag of Gwangalli Beach close to where I live, which ironically I don’t visit very often because it’s always jam-packed with happy, 20-something, heterosexual couples (sigh). That very different audience composition to a busy Tokyo subway station then, as well as the very public and open setting, would likely mean performances there were almost completely devoid of the (negative) gendered dynamics described above.

Maybe various Korean laws are responsible for making them much less common than in Japan?

Or maybe not? Are there buskers in, say, Hongdae in Seoul? In Nampo-dong here in Busan, which I haven’t visited for years? Performers in busy Seoul subway stations? Please do let me know then, if know of any similar Korean spaces to what Dr. Simpkins outlines in Tokyo, and your experiences of them. And how do think the gender dynamics play out in those?

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3 thoughts on “Performing in “Public” Spaces in Korea and Japan—Can Anyone Do it? Or Mostly Just Men?

  1. Hongdae has a specific range of public performance spaces, and I’ve seen as many female as male performers. These range from dancers to singers. Shinchon is similar, but there’s not as much space. Not sure if the rules (social) differ, but in terms of numbers, there’s a lot of women.

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    1. Oh wow! Thanks for reading, and for the very quick response!

      Unfortunately I barely know Seoul at all, and rarely visit. But as Hongdae is so famous for its music scene that even I know about it(!), then I’m not surprised at all to hear it has designated performance spaces and so on. (Still, thanks for confirming.) But I wonder, is there anywhere else in Seoul like it, also with designated spaces? Related, I’m really struggling to think of any here in Busan too, but realize that just like with Seoul, that may just reflect my ignorance and, (sniff), lack of a life…

      Anyway, by coincidence many of my coworkers are live musicians, and I have to leave soon to go to a work-related conference/workshop, so I’ll ask them when I see them there.

      Thanks again for your comment!

      (Update: On Gwangalli Beach though, from what I can tell the buskers seem to be almost exclusively men. But it’s often difficult to tell with 100+ happy couples thronging around each of them…and come to think it, I think I have seen a few mixed groups performing sometimes. Hmmm, I may walk home that way after the conference to check now!)

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      1. I have lots of images of these performance spaces, too. There tend to be a lot of young men singing ballads (aren’t there always) and women dancing – some good, some (cough cough) aspiring. And some obvious veteran performers.

        Hongdae has a lot of public spaces, and you can see maybe a dozen separate stage-like areas filled with performers on any given weekend day.

        Also, there’s also the “red road”, the old railway right-of-way that runs from Hyochang Park to about Hongdae; it has, of course, a rapidly exploding number of trendy cafes and bookshops and artsy shops and the like. It’s a good walk. You can often see performers along this walkway, which we take a lot in the spring and fall.

        I know there are spots in Jamsil, but I don’t spend a huge amount of time out there (it has a life all its own, especially near Coex). Then there’s the entire area near Starfield Mall. In all of the exterior areas, and lots of the open spaces between shops, you can occasionally find performers. A lot of women. I saw a mime, once.

        In general, wherever young people congregate (and I happen to be walking by), as in in their 20’s, there tend to be performance spaces.

        Shinchon serves for Yonsei students, Sogang has the “Red Road” near Daehung Station and whatnot (it’s about halfway between Hyochang Park / Yongsan and Sangsu/Hapjeong/Hongdae on line 6), and I’ve seen these little public gathering/performance spaces near Koryeodae and other universities.

        I see similar things at Gwanghwamun too – if you can fight your way past the endless, “vibrant” paid performances of the protesters from every conceivable faction of everything that go on more or less constantly. I think you need to arrange it, but there are always performers on an evening or afternoon around the place – and a few spots for them. It seems more formal, but given the qu4estionable qualities of some of them, I don’t think they’re all vetted. Lots of women.

        This also doesn’t count the underground music scene, not so underground, around Hongdae, etc. Hit any retro bar or scummy hangout (of which there are now precious few, unlike, say, 15 years ago), and you’re as likely to see a funky pop band with mostly women performers as anything else.

        I recall at Shichong, right on the green in front of city hall, in between the weekly outdoor library book reading spaces with the beanbag chairs, etc., there were often little groups of singers with a portable amplifier, or just people sitting around playing music, but not so much at city hall as elsewhere.

        Hongdae, though, always rammed. I wonder how they partition out the performance spaces.

        Sad. I remember Hongdae from the days when it barely ran up the road. When the little shops in the warren of mazes were way less predictable. How sad the role memory plays in we ancients.

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