ABSTRACT

This book explores the recent landscape of Korean popular culture, including celebrity diplomacy, political activism, and inter-Korean relations in the era of ‘ontact’, with a special focus on K-pop and K-drama.

Utilising the interdisciplinary approach, along with theoretical accounts, it redefines popular culture and its true power – beyond soft power – including discussions of how the pandemic and the use of online platforms have coincidently or effectively influenced recent phenomena surrounding Korean popular culture. It reveals both the possibilities and pitfalls of Hallyu diplomacy and the UN’s celebrity diplomacy more broadly, and highlights how, through the mobilisation of a large internet fanbase, the modern K-pop ‘standom’ can influence political discourse. The book also features an examination of the political significance of the K-drama through which it highlights the potential of popular media to impact inter-Korean relations and inform current international understanding and perception of the Korean conflict.

Dealing with the wider scope of Korean popular culture this book will be a valuable resource to students and scholars of South Korea, international relations, public diplomacy, political activism, and cultural and media studies.

chapter 1|5 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|19 pages

BTS's Soft Power and Public Diplomacy

Partnership with UNICEF

chapter 3|14 pages

Stan Activism

Is K-Pop the New Punk?

chapter 4|21 pages

Desiring Machines

Portrait of a K-Pop Fan

chapter 7|22 pages

Screening the Inter-Korean Conflict

The Politics of Crash Landing on You