Hybridity, confucianism, and ambiguity in the south korean soft power model in hallyu 1.0

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

1-1-2021

Abstract

This paper aims to analyze K-drama’s phenomenon as a popular cultural product that generated Hallyu 1.0 and South Korea’s soft power. Past literature suggests this manufactured television drama is a hybrid of ancient Eastern values and Western modernity that resulted in a female-centric and youth consumption. Confucianism and family values are discussed as a backbone of K-drama’s narrative. On the other hand, the “reserved romance” and conservativeness that led to a particular focus on gendering male K-drama actors invited much debate around the new label of “soft masculinity.” However, we question the absence of discussion and detailed analysis of major elements in the Korean popular cultural production that we found are similar to many identical Western models, including the theme song as the catalyst of Hallyu 2.0, “reserved romance,” and ambiguity in the discussion of image branding among male idols, that may not fully reflect claims of Confucianism. © Media Watch.

Keywords

Confucianism, Hallyu, Hybridity, Korean drama, Media imperialism, Music, Soft power

Divisions

creative,music

Publication Title

Media Watch

Volume

12

Issue

1

Publisher

Deepak Ranjan Jena

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