独自生活:当代韩国的单身女性、出租住房和革命后的影响

IF 0.7 3区 社会学 0 ASIAN STUDIES Journal of Korean Studies Pub Date : 2019-10-01 DOI:10.1215/07311613-7686666
R. Oppenheim
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摘要

《独自生活》的民族志焦点是2005年至2007年与宋杰淑一起进行调查的一群居住在首尔和釜山的30多岁的年轻女性。她们出于各种原因选择不结婚,因此被归类为pihon yŏsŏng,宋翻译为“与婚姻无关的女性”,而不是更传统的mihon yŏsŏng,即尚未结婚的女性。他们往往就业不足,就业不稳定,或者工资低,因此几乎没有机会积累个人货币资本。尽管如此,他们不顾韩国的社会期望及其租赁住房制度所造成的相当大的困难,寻求脱离家庭独立生活。此外,宋注意到,她的参与者中约有90%是前学生活动家,她将这种背景与她研究时普遍存在的特定世代经验联系起来(5)。也许是这样,但宋对话者的最后一个传记坐标有助于强调自力更生的概念策略,一些读者,尤其是本科生读者,需要强调:不,这不是韩国女性的随机样本,即使到了一定年龄;是的,他们是非常特殊的人,但他们的处境和经历以不同寻常的敏锐集中或结晶了韩国当代社会、意识形态和经济动态,在某种程度上也是其他世界背景的缩影。这些动态包括规范的家庭主义和出生主义,正如韩国人对婚姻的期望以及在法律和非正式场合所表达的那样
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Living on Your Own: Single Women, Rental Housing, and Post-Revolutionary Affect in Contemporary South Korea by Jesook Song (review)
The focus of the ethnography of Jesook Song’s Living on Your Own is a set of thirtyish young women residing in Seoul and Pusan with whom Song conducted research in 2005–7. They were unmarried by choice for a variety of reasons, and thus identified with the new category pihon yŏsŏng, which Song translates as “women unassociated with marriage,” rather than the more conventional mihon yŏsŏng, women not yet married. They tended to be underemployed, unstably employed, or poorly paid in some combination, and thus had had little opportunity to amass personal monetary capital. Despite this, they sought, against the considerable difficulties posed by South Korean social expectations and its system of rental housing, to live independently of their families. Furthermore, Song notes that some 90 percent of her participants were former student activists, a background that she associates with a particular generational experience prevalent at the moment of her research (5). This may be so, but this last biographical coordinate of Song’s interlocutors helps underscore a conceptual strategy of Living on Your Own that some readers, not least undergraduate readers, will need underscored: no, this is not a random sample of South Korean women, even of a certain age; yes, they are very specific people, but they are people whose situation and experiences epitomize or crystallize with unusual acuity a roster of contemporary social, ideological, and economic dynamics in South Korea and, to a degree, other world contexts. These dynamics include normative familialism and natalism, as expressed in the Korean expectation to marry as well as in legal and informal
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