Chang Kyung-Sup has been, throughout his long-distinguished career, one of South Koreas most influential and sought-after sociologists. While the worlds economists marvelled at the speed of South Koreas transformation, Chang uncovered a social world of massive inequality, exploitation, corruption, and authoritarianism in a range of publications that were influenced by Ulrich Becks notion of risk society. Beck was a realist, but not a pessimist. The same might be said of Chang. In times of crisis, he has always looked for ways to improve the lives of ordinary citizens through his creative sociological imagination. Bryan S. Turner, Australian Catholic University
This book not only illuminates South Koreas compressed modernity, but extends Ulrich Becks cosmopolitan sociology across axes of politics, class, institutions, family, culture, and gender. Chang Kyung-Sup writes for South Koreans and those interested in Beck, but also invites comparisons across East Asia and the world to refigure the catastrophic metamorphosis through which we all live. Michael D. Kennedy, Brown University