Cultural Policy in South Korea

£43.99

Cultural Policy in South Korea

Making a New Patron State

Regional / International studies Popular culture Media studies Ethnic studies Sociology Politics and government Asian history

Author: Hye-Kyung Lee

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Collection: Media, Culture and Social Change in Asia

Language: English

Published by: Routledge

Published on: 16 July 2018

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 724 Kb

ISBN: 9781317567523


Overview

This is the first English-language book on cultural policy in Korea, which critically historicises and analyses the contentious and dynamic development of the policy. It highlights that the evolution of cultural policy has been bound up with the complicated political, economic and social trajectory of Korea to a surprising degree. Investigating the content and context of the policy from the period of Japanese colonial rule (1910–1945) until the military authoritarian regime (1961–1988), the book discusses how culture, often co-opted by the government, was mobilised to disseminate state agendas and define national identity.

Contemporary Cultural Policy

It then moves on to investigate the distinct characteristics of Korea’s contemporary cultural policy since the 1990s, particularly its energetic pursuit of democracy, a market economy of culture and outward cultural globalisation (the Korean Wave). This book helps readers to understand the continuous presence of the ‘strong state’ in Korean cultural policy and its implications for the cultural life of Koreans.

Implications and Significance

It argues that this exceptionally active cultural policy sets an important condition not only for artistic creation, cultural consumption and cultural business in the country, but also for the nation’s ambitious endeavour to turn the success of its pop culture into a global phenomenon.

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