Hegemonic Mimicry Hegemonic Mimicry

Hegemonic Mimicry

Korean Popular Culture of the Twenty-First Century

    • $28.99
    • $28.99

Publisher Description

In Hegemonic Mimicry, Kyung Hyun Kim considers the recent global success of Korean popular culture—the Korean wave of pop music, cinema, and television, which is also known as hallyu—from a transnational and transcultural perspective. Using the concept of mimicry to think through hallyu’s adaptation of American sensibilities and genres, he shows how the commercialization of Korean popular culture has upended the familiar dynamic of major-to-minor cultural influence, enabling hallyu to become a dominant global cultural phenomenon. At the same time, its worldwide popularity has rendered its Koreanness opaque. Kim argues that Korean cultural subjectivity over the past two decades is one steeped in ethnic rather than national identity. Explaining how South Korea leaped over the linguistic and cultural walls surrounding a supposedly “minor” culture to achieve global ascendance, Kim positions K-pop, Korean cinema and television serials, and even electronics as transformative acts of reappropriation that have created a hegemonic global ethnic identity.

GENRE
Nonfiction
RELEASED
2021
September 13
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
328
Pages
PUBLISHER
Duke University Press
SELLER
Duke University Press
SIZE
68.3
MB

More Books by Kyung Hyun Kim

The Korean Popular Culture Reader The Korean Popular Culture Reader
2014
Virtual Hallyu Virtual Hallyu
2011
The Remasculinization of Korean Cinema The Remasculinization of Korean Cinema
2004