ABSTRACT

You Call That Music?!: Korean Popular Music Through the Generations provides a critical overview of the history of Korean popular music from 1920 to the 2000s from the perspective of cultural history. First published in Korean in 2017 by one of the best-known critics, Lee Young-Mee, this book is a timely and much-needed source of information on Korean popular music of the past hundred years.  

Through this English translation, readers are able to make meaningful connections between specific forms of Korean popular music of various periods and the contemporaneous Korean social and political circumstances. Structured around the central theme of generational conflict, the book provides readers with an accessible way to engage with Korea’s social history and a greater understanding of how specific musical works, genres and styles fit into that history. Its strong narrative force helps illuminate the connections between modern Korean social history and the particular trends of musical production and their reception through the decades.

You Call That Music?! is an invaluable resource for those researching and studying Korean popular music specifically as well as Korea’s cultural and social history.

chapter 1|4 pages

Generational Unity

Cause for Celebration?

chapter 2|10 pages

Grownups in the 1930s

Shocked by the New Pop Music

chapter 3|10 pages

Was Trot Really for Teens?

chapter 4|9 pages

Mambo Dancing in Mambo Pants

In the Aftermath of the Korean War

chapter 6|4 pages

The Late 1960s

The Period of Easing Generational Conflict

chapter 8|11 pages

The Explosion of Generational Conflict

Youth Culture

chapter 12|9 pages

The 1990s

The Era of Seo Taiji and Generational Conflict

chapter 13|11 pages

Reversal, Resistance, and …?

chapter 14|5 pages

Epilogue

When Will an Age of Conflict Come Again?