{"title":"BTS on the Road by Seok-Kyeong Hong (review)","authors":"Ria Chae","doi":"10.1353/seo.2024.a932076","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<span><span>In lieu of</span> an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:</span>\n<p> <span>Reviewed by:</span> <ul> <li><!-- html_title --> <em>BTS on the Road</em> by Seok-Kyeong Hong <!-- /html_title --></li> <li> Ria Chae </li> </ul> <em>BTS on the Road</em> by Seok-Kyeong Hong. Seoul: Seoul National University Press, 2023. 200 pp. <p>It was time to restart the class after a break, but many desks remained empty. Instead of the sound of students moving their chairs, I heard someone jump in the hallway just outside the classroom door. When I opened it, I saw the students taking my course in the international summer school in Seoul, including both Koreans and non-Koreans, doing what looked like an unusual exercise. It turned out to be a rehearsal of the “horse dance” they planned to perform at a party after the completion ceremony. A few days later, I flew to New York and, listening to the local radio, counted “Gangnam Style” playing at least four times during my thirty-minute drive from the airport. I could not believe I was halfway across the globe from Korea. Fast-forward five years, and a conference brought me to Helsinki. As I passed an ordinary-looking clothing store, I heard through its open windows an instrumental version of a very familiar-sounding song. The realization of what it was made me stop in disbelief: “Fire.”</p> <p>Despite the exponential growth of Hallyu for two decades since the late 1990s, both the success of Psy’s “Gangnam Style” in 2012 and BTS’ breakthrough in North America in 2017 took media, scholars, and the public by surprise, each time sparking debate on whether this act was an outlier or representative of Hallyu. <em>BTS on the Road</em> by Seok-Kyeong Hong, a professor of communication at Seoul National University, addresses this question regarding BTS, showing the ways in which the band conforms to and diverges from Hallyu. As such, the book is not only about BTS but also K-pop—and at times Hallyu—at large. It is based on extensive field research, online and offline, and interviews carried out by Hong for three years prior to the publication of the original Korean version in 2020. To answer the book’s overarching question—“How did BTS transcend K-pop and move people all over the world?” (3)—Hong well reflects the interdisciplinarity of Hallyu/K-pop studies by delving into a different field or discipline in each chapter, while also demonstrating an encyclopedic knowledge and minute understanding of the multiple facets of Hallyu befitting a leading scholar of Hallyu studies in Korea.</p> <p>Chapter 1, for example, which introduces the reader to the production and distribution systems and fandom culture of K-pop, includes a discussion of hybridity and counter-hegemonic flows. Hong first explains the deep influence of Korean media culture on the formation of BTS, role of K-pop fandom culture on social media in the rise of the band’s popularity, and importance of distribution strategy, mastered by the Korean entertainment industry, for maintaining <strong>[End Page 99]</strong> the band’s appeal to fans and commercial success. She then defines K-pop as a hybrid that “did not stop at imitating imported music styles but created a highly Korean hybrid through the unique combination of its constituent parts and the regionalism of production environments” (49). Hence, BTS serves as an example of Hallyu’s hybridity: two imports, the Japanese Idol system and American hiphop, are mixed in Korea with the resulting product expressing local experiences. Yet, Hong argues, BTS has outstripped K-pop conventions by becoming the first band to achieve phenomenal success and change the conversation in the West. She thus posits that the hybrid (BTS) has “arrived at influencing the West, the origin of its influence, in a reversal of relationship” (49); in other words, the band acts as a counterflow against North American popular culture.<sup>1</sup></p> <p>In chapter 2, Hong highlights transmediality as another distinguishing feature of BTS within K-pop. Her expertise as a communication scholar is particularly noticeable in this chapter as she effectively explains the rather intricate concept of transmedia and jargon such as “nodes” and “rabbit holes.” She points out three layers of BTS transmedia: the fiction of the Bangtan Universe, reality-based narrative of the development of the band’s solidarity, and individual stories...</p> </p>","PeriodicalId":41678,"journal":{"name":"Seoul Journal of Korean Studies","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.2000,"publicationDate":"2024-07-13","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Seoul Journal of Korean Studies","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1353/seo.2024.a932076","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"AREA STUDIES","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:
Reviewed by:
BTS on the Road by Seok-Kyeong Hong
Ria Chae
BTS on the Road by Seok-Kyeong Hong. Seoul: Seoul National University Press, 2023. 200 pp.
It was time to restart the class after a break, but many desks remained empty. Instead of the sound of students moving their chairs, I heard someone jump in the hallway just outside the classroom door. When I opened it, I saw the students taking my course in the international summer school in Seoul, including both Koreans and non-Koreans, doing what looked like an unusual exercise. It turned out to be a rehearsal of the “horse dance” they planned to perform at a party after the completion ceremony. A few days later, I flew to New York and, listening to the local radio, counted “Gangnam Style” playing at least four times during my thirty-minute drive from the airport. I could not believe I was halfway across the globe from Korea. Fast-forward five years, and a conference brought me to Helsinki. As I passed an ordinary-looking clothing store, I heard through its open windows an instrumental version of a very familiar-sounding song. The realization of what it was made me stop in disbelief: “Fire.”
Despite the exponential growth of Hallyu for two decades since the late 1990s, both the success of Psy’s “Gangnam Style” in 2012 and BTS’ breakthrough in North America in 2017 took media, scholars, and the public by surprise, each time sparking debate on whether this act was an outlier or representative of Hallyu. BTS on the Road by Seok-Kyeong Hong, a professor of communication at Seoul National University, addresses this question regarding BTS, showing the ways in which the band conforms to and diverges from Hallyu. As such, the book is not only about BTS but also K-pop—and at times Hallyu—at large. It is based on extensive field research, online and offline, and interviews carried out by Hong for three years prior to the publication of the original Korean version in 2020. To answer the book’s overarching question—“How did BTS transcend K-pop and move people all over the world?” (3)—Hong well reflects the interdisciplinarity of Hallyu/K-pop studies by delving into a different field or discipline in each chapter, while also demonstrating an encyclopedic knowledge and minute understanding of the multiple facets of Hallyu befitting a leading scholar of Hallyu studies in Korea.
Chapter 1, for example, which introduces the reader to the production and distribution systems and fandom culture of K-pop, includes a discussion of hybridity and counter-hegemonic flows. Hong first explains the deep influence of Korean media culture on the formation of BTS, role of K-pop fandom culture on social media in the rise of the band’s popularity, and importance of distribution strategy, mastered by the Korean entertainment industry, for maintaining [End Page 99] the band’s appeal to fans and commercial success. She then defines K-pop as a hybrid that “did not stop at imitating imported music styles but created a highly Korean hybrid through the unique combination of its constituent parts and the regionalism of production environments” (49). Hence, BTS serves as an example of Hallyu’s hybridity: two imports, the Japanese Idol system and American hiphop, are mixed in Korea with the resulting product expressing local experiences. Yet, Hong argues, BTS has outstripped K-pop conventions by becoming the first band to achieve phenomenal success and change the conversation in the West. She thus posits that the hybrid (BTS) has “arrived at influencing the West, the origin of its influence, in a reversal of relationship” (49); in other words, the band acts as a counterflow against North American popular culture.1
In chapter 2, Hong highlights transmediality as another distinguishing feature of BTS within K-pop. Her expertise as a communication scholar is particularly noticeable in this chapter as she effectively explains the rather intricate concept of transmedia and jargon such as “nodes” and “rabbit holes.” She points out three layers of BTS transmedia: the fiction of the Bangtan Universe, reality-based narrative of the development of the band’s solidarity, and individual stories...
期刊介绍:
Published twice a year under the auspices of the Kyujanggak Institute for Korean Studies at Seoul National University, the Seoul Journal of Korean Studies (SJKS) publishes original, state of the field research on Korea''s past and present. A peer-refereed journal, the Seoul Journal of Korean Studies is distributed to institutions and scholars both internationally and domestically. Work published by SJKS comprise in-depth research on established topics as well as new areas of concern, including transnational studies, that reconfigure scholarship devoted to Korean culture, history, literature, religion, and the arts. Unique features of this journal include the explicit aim of providing an English language forum to shape the field of Korean studies both in and outside of Korea. In addition to articles that represent state of the field research, the Seoul Journal of Korean Studies publishes an extensive "Book Notes" section that places particular emphasis on introducing the very best in Korean language scholarship to scholars around the world.