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E-grāmata: Korean Screen Cultures: Interrogating Cinema, TV, Music and Online Games

  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 29-Dec-2015
  • Izdevniecība: Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783035307825
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  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 29-Dec-2015
  • Izdevniecība: Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783035307825
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The «Korean Wave», or Hallyu phenomenon, has brought South Korean popular culture to the global population. Studies on Korean visual culture have therefore often focused on this aspect, leaving North Korea sidelined and often considered in a negative light because of its political regime. Korean Screen Cultures sets out to redress this imbalance with a broad selection of essays spanning both North and South as well as different methodological approaches, from ethnographic and audience studies to cultural materialist readings. The first section of the book, «The South», highlights popular media – including online gaming and television drama – and concentrates on the margins, in which the very nature of «The South» is contested. «The South and the North» examines North Korea as an ideological other in South Korean popular culture as well as discussing North Korean cinema itself. «The Global» offers new approaches to Korean popular culture beyond national borders and includes work on K-pop and Korean television drama. This book is a vital addition to existing scholarship on Korean popular culture, offering a unique view by providing an imaginary unification of the two Koreas negotiated through local and transnational popular culture flows.

The «Korean Wave», or Hallyu phenomenon, has brought South Korean popular culture to the global population, but North Korean culture has often been overlooked. Korean Screen Cultures sets out to redress this imbalance with a broad selection of essays spanning both North and South, including essays on K-pop, television dramas, film and online games.
List of Figures
xi
List of Tables
xiii
Acknowledgements xv
Julian Stringer
Foreword xvii
Andrew David Jackson
Colette Balmain
Introduction 1(12)
PART I The South
13(82)
Introduction to Part I
15(2)
Jacob Ki Nielsen
1 It's a Roughneck World: Male Solidarity across Generations, Classes and Races in the TV Drama Get Up
17(18)
Ji-Yoon An
2 Blood is Thicker than Water, or is It? Depictions of Alternative Families' in Contemporary Korean Cinema
35(20)
Chloe Paberz
3 The Narrative of the Misfit among South Korean Game Developers
55(22)
Chi-Yun Shin
4 Locating Cosmopolitanism in the Films of EJ-Yong
77(18)
PART II The South and the North
95(98)
Introduction to Part II
97(4)
Jake Bevan
5 `Arirang': Addressing the Nation in South and North Korea
101(18)
Stephen J. Epstein
Christopher K. Green
6 Now on My Way to Meet Who? South Korean Television, North Korean Refugees and the Dilemmas of Representation
119(24)
Immanuel Kim
7 Comedy and Ideology in My Family's Problem
143(18)
Andrew David Jackson
8 DPRK Film, Order No. 27 and the Acousmatic Voice
161(16)
Hana Lee
9 How Are Historic Events Remembered? North Korean War Films on the Inchon Landing Operation
177(16)
PART III The Global
193(128)
Introduction to Part III
195(4)
Mark Morris
10 Ch'unhyang at War: Rediscovering Franco-North Korean Film Moranbong (1959)
199(20)
Jessica Conte
11 Framing South Korea and Vietnams Past and Present in Muoi: The Legend of a Portrait
219(20)
Juyeon Bae
12 Searching for Traces of Absence: Korean Diaspora in Contemporary Korean Cinema
239(18)
Cedarbough T. Saeji
13 Cosmopolitan Strivings and Racialisation: The Foreign Dancing Body in Korean Popular Music Videos
257(36)
Marion Schulze
14 Inappropriate Desire and Heterosexuality Negotiated: The Case of Women K-Drama Watchers
293(28)
Notes on Contributors 321(4)
Index 325
Andrew David Jackson is Associate Professor of Korean Studies at the University of Copenhagen. He obtained his PhD in Korean history from the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. He has previously edited two volumes: Key Papers on Korea: Essays Celebrating 25 Years of the Centre for Korean Studies, SOAS, University of London (2013) and How East Asian Films are Reshaping National Identities (2006). Colette Balmain is Senior Lecturer in Film, TV and Media at Kingston University and specialises in East Asian cinemas and cultures. She is the editor for Directory of World Cinema: South Korea and is currently working on the second edition of her first book, Introduction to Japanese Horror Film, a monograph on South Korean horror cinema and a book on East Asian Gothic cinema.