Manufacturing Creativity: Production, Performance, and Dissemination of K-pop
- Authors
- Park, Gil-Sung
- Issue Date
- 2013
- Publisher
- ACAD KOREAN STUDIES
- Keywords
- K-pop (Korean pop); Hallyu; creativity; music industry; globalization; localization; social network service (SNS) sites
- Citation
- KOREA JOURNAL, v.53, no.4, pp.14 - 33
- Indexed
- AHCI
SCOPUS
KCI
- Journal Title
- KOREA JOURNAL
- Volume
- 53
- Number
- 4
- Start Page
- 14
- End Page
- 33
- URI
- https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/106389
- ISSN
- 0023-3900
- Abstract
- The rise of K-pop (Korean pop) as a new global music genre has wrought theoretical turmoil within the field of cultural studies. This article argues that the global ascendance of K-pop can primarily be attributed to the passionate support of inter-Asian audiences. However, the actual production, performance, and dissemination of K-pop contents have little to do with the Asian pop-culture system. Although the manufacture of K-pop music and its performers depends on Korean talent and management, K-pop producers tend to rely heavily on the global music industries of North America and Europe for their creative content. The global dissemination of K-pop would not have been possible without global social network service (SNS) sites such as YouTube, Facebook, and Twitter-none of which are owned or operated by Asians. This article argues that the manufacturing of creativity in non-Western music, as illustrated by the case of Hallyu, involves three stages: globalization of creativity, localization of musical contents and performers, and global dissemination of the musical contents through social media.
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Collections - College of Liberal Arts > Department of Sociology > 1. Journal Articles
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