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9. When K-pop Meets Islam: Cultural Appropriation and Fan Engagement
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Young Jung
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Dedication v
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Introduction 1
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PART I : Transcultural Affinity, Excess, and Contradiction
- 1. The Road to Fandom: Joy and Black “Fans” in K-pop 33
- 2. Between Appreciation and Appropriation: Race-Transitioning among Hallyu Fans 52
- 3. Korean Romance for Wholesomeness and Racism? The Transcultural Reception of the Reality Dating Show Single’s Inferno 74
- 4. K-pop and the Racialization of Asian American Popular Musicians 98
- 5. “Soft” Koreans and “Sensual” Cubans: Race, Gender, and the Reception of South Korean Popular Culture in Cuba 122
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PART II: Intersectional Connection and Imaginaries
- 6. Latin Orientalism and Anglo Hegemony in Korean Rock: Seo Taiji’s “Moai” (2009) 149
- 7. “I Was Probably Korean in a Previous Life”: Transracial Jokes and Fantasies of Hallyu Fans 171
- 8. Hallyu Dreaming: Making Sense of Race and Gender in K-dramas in the US Midwest and Ireland 194
- 9. When K-pop Meets Islam: Cultural Appropriation and Fan Engagement 216
- 10. “I Can Do Both”: Queering K-pop Idols through the White Discursive Standpoint of TikTok Users 238
- Contributors 261
- Index 267
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Dedication v
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Introduction 1
-
PART I : Transcultural Affinity, Excess, and Contradiction
- 1. The Road to Fandom: Joy and Black “Fans” in K-pop 33
- 2. Between Appreciation and Appropriation: Race-Transitioning among Hallyu Fans 52
- 3. Korean Romance for Wholesomeness and Racism? The Transcultural Reception of the Reality Dating Show Single’s Inferno 74
- 4. K-pop and the Racialization of Asian American Popular Musicians 98
- 5. “Soft” Koreans and “Sensual” Cubans: Race, Gender, and the Reception of South Korean Popular Culture in Cuba 122
-
PART II: Intersectional Connection and Imaginaries
- 6. Latin Orientalism and Anglo Hegemony in Korean Rock: Seo Taiji’s “Moai” (2009) 149
- 7. “I Was Probably Korean in a Previous Life”: Transracial Jokes and Fantasies of Hallyu Fans 171
- 8. Hallyu Dreaming: Making Sense of Race and Gender in K-dramas in the US Midwest and Ireland 194
- 9. When K-pop Meets Islam: Cultural Appropriation and Fan Engagement 216
- 10. “I Can Do Both”: Queering K-pop Idols through the White Discursive Standpoint of TikTok Users 238
- Contributors 261
- Index 267