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[Hybrid Lecture]

1970s Youth Culture at its Zenith: Music and film in the years before Emergency Measure 9

SPEAKER: Matt VanVolkenburg

DATE: Tuesday. September 13, 2022. 7:30PM (Seoul)

ADMISSION (Online & In-person): Free for Members; W10,000 for Non-members

* If you would like to attend online Zoom, please RSVP by Monday (September 12). We will email you with the link on Tuesday.
* To attend in-person, RSVP is not required.

 

ABSTRACT:

The westernized youth culture that took root in South Korea in the late 1960s found its expression in art, fashion, and music but provoked a government crackdown on experimental art, miniskirts and long hair in 1970. Amid student protests and the imposition of the authoritarian Yushin constitution in 1972, rock music continued to develop as it embraced psychedelia and funk, while the university-student-led folk music scene eventually found its own voice as it shifted to folk rock. This change was linked to the expression of youth culture in literature and films, which centered in particular on the efforts of author, screenwriter, and essayist Choi In-ho. The massive success of his novel and film “Heavenly Homecoming of Stars,” with its “avant-garde” soundtrack by folksinger Lee Jang-hui and his session band “Light of the East,” inspired a surge in media coverage of youth culture in 1974. Just as youth culture was hitting a peak of creativity and popularity, however, the government moved against it, employing censorship and a sudden crackdown on marijuana to suppress it in the name of social purification – all of which occurred in the shadow of Emergency Measure 9, which criminalized dissent.

This presentation will draw on years of researching weekly contemporary magazines and will feature a variety of photos, film and sound clips, and lyrics, and will also quantify the growth in the popularity of rock and folk music while examining the social factors that influenced the development of popular music at this time.

SHORT BIO:

Matt VanVolkenburg first arrived in Korea in 2001 and in 2005 began his blog, Gusts of Popular Feeling, where for 16 years he has written about modern Korean history, including film, music, urban redevelopment, and media depictions of foreigners. He contributed research to a case brought before the UN Committee on the Eradication of Racial Discrimination which ultimately ended HIV testing of foreign English teachers in Korea. He received an M.A. in Korean Studies from the University of Washington where he began researching the development and suppression of youth culture in 1970s Korea. He is currently co-writing former Peace Corps Volunteer David Dolinger’s memoir of the 1980 Gwangju Uprising.

 

VENUE: Online Zoom & In-person 

In-Person:  First floor of (historic) Korea Christian Building (한국기독교회관), Daehak-no 19, Jongno-gu, Seoul (a short walk from Exit 2 of Jongno-5-ga Station (Line 1))  * No RSVP required.

Online Zoom: Please RSVP to receive the link by  September 12 (Monday)

    ☞ Payment to be remitted to the following account:

– SHINHAN BANK #100-026-383501 (왕립아세아학회, RAS-KB)
– PAYPAL: https://paypal.me/RASKorea

* Free for Members of RAS Korea and RAS Associates (Beijing, Shanghai, Hong Kong, and London)

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