The Japan Times - Hello Hallyu: why is South Korean culture sweeping the globe?

EUR -
AED 4.282286
AFN 72.889506
ALL 95.207603
AMD 430.01375
ANG 2.087753
AOA 1070.42764
ARS 1622.784305
AUD 1.615801
AWG 2.101792
AZN 1.980037
BAM 1.948086
BBD 2.348989
BDT 143.162498
BGN 1.947198
BHD 0.439945
BIF 3468.977203
BMD 1.166043
BND 1.484988
BOB 8.058985
BRL 5.837324
BSD 1.166277
BTN 111.748109
BWP 16.426743
BYN 3.258314
BYR 22854.438042
BZD 2.345552
CAD 1.600621
CDF 2617.765364
CHF 0.914545
CLF 0.02651
CLP 1043.367038
CNY 7.911775
CNH 7.916136
COP 4418.987218
CRC 529.980953
CUC 1.166043
CUP 30.900133
CVE 110.420738
CZK 24.310883
DJF 207.229054
DKK 7.473652
DOP 69.611585
DZD 154.439062
EGP 61.655687
ERN 17.490641
ETB 183.593618
FJD 2.556084
FKP 0.862511
GBP 0.870795
GEL 3.124803
GGP 0.862511
GHS 13.304314
GIP 0.862511
GMD 84.53284
GNF 10237.855419
GTQ 8.897767
GYD 243.990718
HKD 9.133322
HNL 31.040319
HRK 7.5352
HTG 152.719375
HUF 357.85873
IDR 20501.247154
ILS 3.384559
IMP 0.862511
INR 111.602244
IQD 1527.516012
IRR 1533346.225611
ISK 143.609809
JEP 0.862511
JMD 184.399822
JOD 0.82669
JPY 184.674396
KES 150.710561
KGS 101.97073
KHR 4678.163038
KMF 492.06927
KPW 1049.40427
KRW 1743.787798
KWD 0.359712
KYD 0.971947
KZT 552.061604
LAK 25600.468408
LBP 105018.290233
LKR 379.337915
LRD 213.677252
LSL 19.227736
LTL 3.443021
LVL 0.705327
LYD 7.380747
MAD 10.737796
MDL 20.047359
MGA 4871.140463
MKD 61.623214
MMK 2448.532445
MNT 4174.584911
MOP 9.409221
MRU 46.630148
MUR 54.687743
MVR 17.953612
MWK 2030.079949
MXN 20.097411
MYR 4.5843
MZN 74.521703
NAD 19.22769
NGN 1596.510503
NIO 42.811215
NOK 10.814812
NPR 178.792592
NZD 1.975224
OMR 0.448341
PAB 1.166257
PEN 4.019331
PGK 5.084821
PHP 71.905202
PKR 324.858355
PLN 4.243469
PYG 7106.858587
QAR 4.250809
RON 5.201602
RSD 117.404153
RUB 85.416661
RWF 1703.588468
SAR 4.323481
SBD 9.347158
SCR 15.925798
SDG 700.210747
SEK 10.964079
SGD 1.488553
SHP 0.870569
SLE 28.742478
SLL 24451.336053
SOS 666.396592
SRD 43.384983
STD 24134.730844
STN 24.778409
SVC 10.204331
SYP 128.881228
SZL 19.227966
THB 37.837714
TJS 10.898504
TMT 4.08115
TND 3.367544
TOP 2.807551
TRY 53.109051
TTD 7.918441
TWD 36.822696
TZS 3025.881057
UAH 51.26883
UGX 4361.616853
USD 1.166043
UYU 46.444895
UZS 14044.985317
VES 594.855331
VND 30719.39644
VUV 137.683599
WST 3.158251
XAF 653.355863
XAG 0.013988
XAU 0.000251
XCD 3.151288
XCG 2.101868
XDR 0.810364
XOF 650.065331
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.276306
ZAR 19.248742
ZMK 10495.787518
ZMW 21.954032
ZWL 375.465292
  • RBGPF

    -0.2100

    60.79

    -0.35%

  • CMSD

    0.0400

    23.6

    +0.17%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0700

    15.93

    -0.44%

  • CMSC

    0.0898

    23.14

    +0.39%

  • VOD

    -0.0300

    15.48

    -0.19%

  • AZN

    -2.7600

    184.96

    -1.49%

  • RIO

    -2.4500

    109.59

    -2.24%

  • BCE

    -0.2000

    24.19

    -0.83%

  • GSK

    -0.0300

    50.96

    -0.06%

  • NGG

    0.4500

    87.43

    +0.51%

  • RELX

    -0.1600

    31.46

    -0.51%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    13.14

    +0.08%

  • BTI

    1.3500

    66.7

    +2.02%

  • BCC

    2.4200

    69.4

    +3.49%

  • BP

    -0.0200

    44.12

    -0.05%

Hello Hallyu: why is South Korean culture sweeping the globe?
Hello Hallyu: why is South Korean culture sweeping the globe? / Photo: Jung Yeon-je - AFP/File

Hello Hallyu: why is South Korean culture sweeping the globe?

It's won Oscars. Its television shows and K-pop stars dominate global charts. Its leading novelist just won the Nobel literature prize. How did South Korea become such a global cultural powerhouse?

Text size:

AFP takes a look at what we know:

What is Hallyu?

From the late 1990s, Korean dramas and K-pop idols started gaining traction in neighbouring Asian countries like China and Japan, marking the start of Hallyu, or the Korean Wave.

It wasn't until Psy's breakout hit "Gangnam Style" that Hallyu hit the West.

In the decade that followed, "Babyshark" broke YouTube records, K-pop megastars BTS topped the charts, Bong Joon-ho's "Parasite" won an Oscar, and Squid Game became Netflix's most-watched non-English television show.

Cultural exports were worth some $13.2 billion to South Korea in 2022, more than home appliances or electric cars -- but the bulk of that was made up of video games, such as Battlegrounds Mobile which are wildly popular in India and Pakistan.

The government is targeting $25 billion by 2027 -- so expect more K-culture, especially in new markets such as Europe and the Middle East.

Why South Korea?

For Oscar-winning "Parasite" director Bong Joon-ho, the key to the East Asian country's cultural success is that everyone has lived through "dramatic times".

The 1950s Korean War -- which left Seoul locked in conflict with its nuclear-armed northern neighbour -- military dictatorship, sweeping economic transformation, and a democratic transition.

In the South, many have "experienced turbulence and extreme events," Bong has said. As a result "our movies can't help but different."

South Korea "provides creators with ample inspiration and stimulation. It's such a dynamic and turbulent place," he said.

Renowned South Korean filmmaker Park Chan-wook had a similar answer when asked for the secret of his country's cinematic success. "Why don't you try living in 'dynamic Korea?'" he replied.

And K-literature?

Turning contemporary history into art is what 53-year-old novelist Han Kang, who won the literature Nobel Thursday, excels at.

Han has spoken of the transformative experience of learning about a 1980 massacre in her native Gwangju, when South Korea's then-military government violently repressed a democratic uprising.

Han said her father showed her photographs including the scattered bodies of victims, and citizens lining up to donate blood in the chaos -- which later inspired her book "Human Acts".

While many South Korean authors have delved into the themes of the country's traumatic past, Han established her own "striking literary aesthetic" while addressing challenging subjects, said Oh Hyung-yup, a Korean literature professor at Korea University and literary critic.

Women first?

South Korea has some of the worst rates of female workforce participation among advanced economies, but for cultural exports women have been trailblazers.

Han's Booker-winning novel "The Vegetarian", which follows a woman who stops eating meat, is regarded as a landmark ecofeminism text. But it was outsold internationally by Cho Nam-Joo's "Kim Ji-young, Born 1982" about a married South Korean woman who quits her job to raise her child.

As the first Asian woman to win a Nobel for literature, it is appropriate that Han Kang's work addresses violence in ways that male authors have not in the past, Kang Ji-hee, a South Korean literary critic, told AFP.

"Han Kang reinterpreted this type of internal struggle," Kang said, documenting behaviours "that were previously considered to be simply passive, and gave them a whole new meaning."

So was it the government?

With the growing success of K-culture exports across the board -- from film to food, with Korean staples like kimchi and bibimbap soaring in popularity overseas -- it seems like part of a masterplan.

But while the South Korean government has ploughed millions into supporting cultural industries, experts say success has come largely despite, not because, of the state.

When former-president Park Geun-hye was in power from 2013 to 2017, Nobel-winner Han was one of over 9,000 artists "blacklisted" for criticising her government, along with Bong.

Some government initiatives, for example the government-affiliated Literature Translation Institute of Korea (LTI Korea), may have paid off, helping to bring works like Han's to a global audience.

But a growing number of translators, who are more adventurous with their choice of works, have also helped to bring edgier offers to the international market.

Success also breeds more success, cultural export-wise: The reading habits of K-pop megastars have boosted K-literature.

When BTS member Jungkook was seen reading the self-help book "I Decided to Live as Me" it sparked a sales frenzy, with hundreds of thousands of copies flying off shelves.

But Bong also believes that his compatriots' hard drinking habits helped spur creativity.

"We are a very workaholic country. People work too much. And, at the same time, we drink too much. So every night, very hardcore drinking sessions and everything is very extreme."

Y.Hara--JT