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book: Consuming Korean Tradition in Early and Late Modernity
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Consuming Korean Tradition in Early and Late Modernity

Commodification, Tourism, and Performance
  • Edited by: Laurel Kendall
Language: English
Published/Copyright: 2010
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About this book

Contributors to this volume explore the irony of modern things made in the image of a traditional "us." They describe the multifaceted ways "tradition" is produced and consumed within the frame of contemporary Korean life and how these processes are enabled by different apparatuses of modernity that Koreans first encountered in the early twentieth century. Commoditized goods and services first appeared in the colonial period in such spectacular and spectacularly foreign forms as department stores, restaurants, exhibitions, and staged performances. Today, these same forms have become the media through which many Koreans consume "tradition" in multiple forms.

In the colonial period, commercial representations of Korea—tourist sites, postcard images, souvenir miniatures, and staged performances—were produced primarily for foreign consumption, often by non-Koreans. In late modernity, efficiencies of production, communication, and transportation combine with material wealth and new patterns of leisure activity and tourism to enable the localized consumption of Korean tradition in theme parks, at sites of alternative tourism, at cultural festivals and performances, as handicrafts, art, and cuisine, and in coffee table books, broadcast music, and works of popular folklore. Consuming Korean Tradition offers a unique insight into how and why different signifiers of "Korea" have come to be valued as tradition in the present tense, the distinctive histories and contemporary anxieties that undergird this process, and how Koreans today experience their sense of a common Korean past. It offers new insights into issues of national identity, heritage preservation, tourism, performance, the commodification of contemporary life, and the nature of "tradition" and "modernity" more generally.

Consuming Korean Tradition will prove invaluable to Koreanists and those interested in various aspects of contemporary Korean society, including anthropology, film/cultural studies, and contemporary history.

Contributors: Katarzyna J. Cwiertka, Kyung-Koo Han, Keith Howard, Hyung Il Pai, Laurel Kendall, Okpyo Moon, Robert Oppenheim, Timothy R. Tangherlini, Judy Van Zile.

Author / Editor information

Kendall Laurel :

Laurel Kendall is Curator in Charge of Asian Ethnographic Collections in the Division of Anthropology, American Museum of Natural History, and also teaches at Columbia University.


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Laurel Kendall
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Part I. Modernity as Spectacle / Spectacular Korea

Katarzyna J. Cwiertka
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Timothy R. Tangherlini
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39
Part II. Korea as Itinerary

Hyung Pai
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65

Okpyo Moon
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88

Robert Oppenheim
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105
Part III. Korean Things

Laurel Kendall
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127

Kyung-Koo Han
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149
Part IV. Korea Performed

Judy Van Zile
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167

Keith Howard
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195

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217

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Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
September 22, 2010
eBook ISBN:
9780824860813
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
272
Other:
17 illus.
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