K-drama school A pop culture inquiry into why we love Korean television

Grace Jung, 1987-

Book - 2024

"From stand-up comedian and media studies PhD Grace Jung comes a rollicking deep dive into the cultural significance of Korean television. K-Drama School analyzes everything from common tropes like amnesia and slapping to conspicuous product placements of Subway sandwiches and coffee; to representations of disability, race and gender; to what Korea's war-torn history says about South Korea's media output and the stories being told on screen. With chapters organized by "lessons," each one inquiring into a different theme of Korean television, K-Drama School offers a groundbreaking exploration into this singular form of entertainment, from an author who writes with humor and heart about shows that spur tears and laugh...ter, keeping us glued to the TV while making fans of us all."--Dust jacket flap.

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791.4509/Jung
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Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor New Shelf 791.4509/Jung (NEW SHELF) Due Dec 4, 2024
Subjects
Published
Philadelphia, PA : Running Press 2024
Language
English
Main Author
Grace Jung, 1987- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xiii, 241 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9780762485727
  • Introduction: Watch Ten Thousand Hours of Korean TV and Get a PhD
  • Lesson 1. Korean Overachievement and SKY Castle
  • Lesson 2. A Brief History of K-Traumas and Early Korean Television
  • Lesson 3. Realism and Trauma Recovery in My Mister
  • Lesson 4. Penthouse and Food-Slapping Makjang Dramas for the Ego's Soul
  • Lesson 5. Orphans with Leukemia in K-Dramas
  • Lesson 6. Subway Sandwiches, Soju, and Coffee in K-Dramas
  • Lesson 7. #MeTooKorea and Resilience in Something in the Rain and One Spring Night
  • Lesson 8. Go Mash Something
  • Lesson 9. The Cycle of Military, Child Abuse, and Bullying in DP
  • Lesson 10. Top Ten Greatest K-Dramas of All Time According to Dr. Grace Jung, PhD in Cinema and Media Studies from the University of California, Los Angeles, School of Theater, Film and Television and Former Fulbright Scholar
  • Lesson 11. Amnesiac Queens, Zombies, and Ghosts of a Forgotten War
  • Lesson 12. Sexual Repression, Queerness, and Feminism in K-Dramas
  • Lesson 13. US-South Korea Relations and National Self-Perception in K-Dramas
  • Lesson 14. The Humanness of Disability, Addiction, and "Welbing"
  • Lesson 15. My Liberation Notes and How It Feels to Be Free
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Comedian Jung (Deli Ideology) adapts her podcast of the same name into an astute examination of the themes and appeal of Korean television shows. Many such programs "use extreme forms of storytelling to moralize the importance of self-care," Jung contends, noting that the series Extraordinary Attorney Woo (2022) and Crash Course in Romance (2023) revolve around protagonists who strain under the intense demands of their jobs and the loved ones "who rescue them from their dogged routines and habits." Jung offers a whistle-stop survey of Korean history through television, discussing how Eyes of Dawn (1991--1992) dramatizes Japan's colonization of the peninsula during the first half of the 20th century, and how military dictators Park Chung-hee and Chun Doo-hwan sought to control and distract the public with propagandistic programs in the 1960s and '80s, respectively. Elsewhere, Jung expounds on Something in the Rain's critique of the sexualization of women in the workplace and When the Camelia Blooms's exploration of South Korean and American adoption agencies' unethical practices. Jung's penetrating commentary showcases the variety of the K-drama format while assisting foreign readers in understanding the cultural context. It's an essential companion for anyone who has binged Crash Landing on You or Squid Game. (Apr.)

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