@article{ART002441427},
author={Jeong Changhoon},
title={The Genealogy of Forbidden Sound―Political Aesthetics of Ambiguity in the Criticism of Japanese Style in Korean Society of the 1960s},
journal={Journal of Popular Narrative},
issn={1738-3188},
year={2019},
volume={25},
number={1},
pages={349-392},
doi={10.18856/jpn.2019.25.1.011}
TY - JOUR
AU - Jeong Changhoon
TI - The Genealogy of Forbidden Sound―Political Aesthetics of Ambiguity in the Criticism of Japanese Style in Korean Society of the 1960s
JO - Journal of Popular Narrative
PY - 2019
VL - 25
IS - 1
PB - The Association of Popular Narrative
SP - 349
EP - 392
SN - 1738-3188
AB - In the 1960s of Korea, the normalization of diplomatic relations between Korea and Japan led to a sense of a vigorous anxiety and fear that "Japan will once again come to the Korean peninsula”. As a reaction to this, the discourse on the criticism of ‘Japanese Style’ strongly emerged. If the prior discourse of criticism was to express the national antipathy toward the colonial remnants that had not yet been disposed of, the critical discourse of the 1960s was the wariness of the newly created ‘Japanese Style’ in popular culture, and to grasp it as a symptomatic phenomenon that ‘evil-minded Japan’ was revealed. Thus, this new logic of criticism of the ‘Japanese Style’ had a qualitative difference from the existing ones. It was accompanied by a willingness to inspect and censor the ‘masses’ that grew up as consumers of transnational ‘mass culture’ that flowed and chained in the geopolitical order under the Cold War system.
Therefore, the topology of ‘popular things=Japanese things=consuming things’ reveals the paradox of moral demands that existed within Korean society in the 1960s. This was to solidify the divisive circulation structure that caused them to avoid direct contact with the other called ‘Japan’, but at the same time, get as close to it as ever. It is a repetitive obsession that pushes the other to another side through the moral segregation that strictly draws a line of demarcation between oneself and the other, but on the other hand is attracted to the object and pulls it back to its side.
This paper intends to listen to the different voices that have arisen in the repetitive obsession to understand the significance of the dissonance that has been repeated in the contemporary era. This will be an examination of the paradoxical object of Japan that has been repeatedly asked to build the internal control principle of Korean society, or to hide the oppressive and violent side of the power, and that can neither be accepted nor destroyed completely as part of oneself.
KW - Japanese style;popular song;The Voice of a Governor;1960s Korea;Postcoloniality;Korea-Japan relations
DO - 10.18856/jpn.2019.25.1.011
ER -
Jeong Changhoon. (2019). The Genealogy of Forbidden Sound―Political Aesthetics of Ambiguity in the Criticism of Japanese Style in Korean Society of the 1960s. Journal of Popular Narrative, 25(1), 349-392.
Jeong Changhoon. 2019, "The Genealogy of Forbidden Sound―Political Aesthetics of Ambiguity in the Criticism of Japanese Style in Korean Society of the 1960s", Journal of Popular Narrative, vol.25, no.1 pp.349-392. Available from: doi:10.18856/jpn.2019.25.1.011
Jeong Changhoon "The Genealogy of Forbidden Sound―Political Aesthetics of Ambiguity in the Criticism of Japanese Style in Korean Society of the 1960s" Journal of Popular Narrative 25.1 pp.349-392 (2019) : 349.
Jeong Changhoon. The Genealogy of Forbidden Sound―Political Aesthetics of Ambiguity in the Criticism of Japanese Style in Korean Society of the 1960s. 2019; 25(1), 349-392. Available from: doi:10.18856/jpn.2019.25.1.011
Jeong Changhoon. "The Genealogy of Forbidden Sound―Political Aesthetics of Ambiguity in the Criticism of Japanese Style in Korean Society of the 1960s" Journal of Popular Narrative 25, no.1 (2019) : 349-392.doi: 10.18856/jpn.2019.25.1.011
Jeong Changhoon. The Genealogy of Forbidden Sound―Political Aesthetics of Ambiguity in the Criticism of Japanese Style in Korean Society of the 1960s. Journal of Popular Narrative, 25(1), 349-392. doi: 10.18856/jpn.2019.25.1.011
Jeong Changhoon. The Genealogy of Forbidden Sound―Political Aesthetics of Ambiguity in the Criticism of Japanese Style in Korean Society of the 1960s. Journal of Popular Narrative. 2019; 25(1) 349-392. doi: 10.18856/jpn.2019.25.1.011
Jeong Changhoon. The Genealogy of Forbidden Sound―Political Aesthetics of Ambiguity in the Criticism of Japanese Style in Korean Society of the 1960s. 2019; 25(1), 349-392. Available from: doi:10.18856/jpn.2019.25.1.011
Jeong Changhoon. "The Genealogy of Forbidden Sound―Political Aesthetics of Ambiguity in the Criticism of Japanese Style in Korean Society of the 1960s" Journal of Popular Narrative 25, no.1 (2019) : 349-392.doi: 10.18856/jpn.2019.25.1.011