ABSTRACT

This book examines key features, problems, and implications of the 2016–2017 Candlelight Movement, a historical cornerstone for democracy and social movements in South Korea.

The Candlelight Movement brought profound social changes with important lessons and questions for scholars, practitioners, activists, and the public. To examine the full complexity of the movement, this edited volume utilises wide-ranging methodological and theoretical approaches, which include case study approaches, ethnography, survey, feminist film criticism, critical discourse analysis, and rhetorical criticism. Chapters place ‘communication’ at the centre of their analyses, calling attention to the mediated and mediatised, the performative and other discursive practices of the 2016–2017 Candlelight Movement. In doing so, the book discusses not only the usual players and factors – nor the institutions that exert their influence through democratic politics and the public sphere – but also the counter-public embracing new and social media, collective singing, the body, and performance, as their choice of political media. As such, this volume offers important insights into how communication plays a critical role in forming, moving, and transforming new social movements.

The Candlelight Movement, Democracy, and Communication in Korea will appeal to students and scholars of communication and media studies, political science, sociology, and Korean studies.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

part I|39 pages

Media and media space

chapter 1|12 pages

A crisis of press freedom

Investigative journalism and the downfall of the President

part II|51 pages

Culture and performance

chapter 4|18 pages

“With the brightest light we have”

K-pop fandom in candlelight movement and diversification of Korean protest culture 1

chapter 5|15 pages

Channeling anger into hope

chapter 6|16 pages

Dancing for hope

The shamanic ritual and performative Koreanness at the candlelight protests

part III|52 pages

Counterpublics and representation

chapter 7|13 pages

Contested neoliberal vulnerability

Laboring, feminine, and queer subjects in the streets of the impeachment protest

chapter 8|16 pages

The conservative news media outlets

Blowing out candles for economic democracy

chapter 9|21 pages

From flags to candles

Visual hailing and articulation of nation