China's youth look to Seoul for inspiration (New York Times) Updated: 2006-01-04 09:03 They also show enduring Confucian-rooted values in their emphasis on family
relations, offering to Chinese both a reminder of what was lost during the
Cultural Revolution and an example of an Asian country that has modernized and
retained its traditions.
"Three Guys and Three Girls" and "Three Friends" are South Korea's homegrown
version of the American TV show "Friends." As for "Sex and the City," its South
Korean twin, "The Marrying Type," a sitcom about three single professional women
in their 30's looking for love in Seoul, was so popular in China that episodes
were illegally downloaded or sold on pirated DVD's.
"We feel that we can see a modern lifestyle in those shows," said Qu Yuan,
23, a student at Tsinghua University here. "American dramas also show the same
kind of lifestyle. We know that South Korea and America have similar political
systems and economies. But it's easier to accept that lifestyle from South
Koreans because they are culturally closer to us. We feel we can live like them
in a few years."
"They seem to have similar lifestyles," Ms. Qu said. "They have friends and
go to bars. They have good mobile phones and good cars and lead comfortable
lives."
Her classmate, Huo Kan, 23, said, "American dramas are too modern."
Ms. Qu said, "They're postmodern."
Ms. Huo added, "Something like 'Sex and the City' is too alien to us."
Jin Yaxi, 25, a graduate student at Beijing University, said, "We like
American culture, but we can't accept it directly."
"And there is no obstacle to our accepting South Korean culture, unlike
Japanese culture," said Ms. Jin, who has studied both Korean and Japanese.
"Because of the history between China and Japan, if a young person here likes
Japanese culture, the parents will get angry."
Politics also seems to underlie the Chinese preference for South
Korean-filtered American hip-hop culture. Messages about rebelliousness, teenage
angst and freedom appear more palatable to Chinese in their Koreanized versions.
Kwon Ki Joon, 22, a South Korean who attends Beijing University and graduated
from a Chinese high school here, said his male Chinese friends were fans of
South Korea hip-hop bands, like H.O.T., and its song "We Are the Future." A
sample of the song's lyrics translate roughly as: "We are still under the
shadows of adults/Still not Free/To go through the day with all sorts of
interferences is tiring."
To Mr. Kwon, there is no mystery about the band's appeal. "It's about wanting
a more open world, about rebelliousness," he said. "Korean hip-hop is basically
trying to adapt American hip-hop."
Like many South Koreans, Oh Dong Suk, 40, an investor in online games here,
said he believed that South Korea's pop culture was a fruit of the country's
democratization. "If you watch South Korean movies from the 1970's or 1980's,
you could feel that it was a controlled society," Mr. Oh said.
Hwang In Choul, 35, a South Korean missionary here, also sees a direct link
between South Korea's democratization and its influence in China. After
restrictions on travel outside South Korea were lifted in the late 1980's, South
Korea's missionary movement grew from several hundred to its current size of
14,000 missionaries.
Mr. Hwang, who since 2000 has trained 50 Chinese pastors to proselytize, is
among the 1,500 South Korean missionaries evangelizing in China, usually
secretly.
"Under military rule, it was simply not possible to come out of South Korea,
and even our activities inside the country were monitored," Mr. Hwang said. "We
had the potential to be missionaries out in the world, but we were constrained.
We had the passion, but we couldn't express our passion."
Until South Korea and China, enemies during the Korean War, normalized
relations in 1992, North Korea had a stronger presence here, with its embassy,
restaurants and shops. Back then, South Korea remained unknown to most Chinese,
or suffered from a poor image.
"If a Japanese television set stopped working, the Chinese would say
something's wrong with the power lines," said Ohn Dae Sung, the manager of a
Korean restaurant, Suboksung, who has been here since 1993. "If a South Korean
television set stopped working, they'd say it was the fault of the set."
The Korean Wave has been gathering for some time, with its roots traceable to
several developments, including the Seoul Olympics in 1988. The first civilian
president was elected in 1992, ending nearly 32 years of military rule and
ushering in tumultuous change.
A newly confident South Korea has pursued an increasingly independent foreign
policy, often to Washington's displeasure, warming up to China and to North
Korea. Social changes that took decades elsewhere were compressed into a few
years, as new freedoms yielded a rich civil society, but also caused strains
between generations and the sexes, leading to one of the world's highest divorce
rates and lowest birth rates.
As South Korea quickly became the world's most wired nation, new online news
sites challenged the conservative mainstream media's monopoly; press clubs, a
Japanese colonial legacy that controlled the flow of news, were weakened or
eliminated. Unlike other Asian nations, South Korea has tackled head-on taboo
subjects in its society, including the legacy of military rule and collaboration
during Japanese colonial rule.
Here, at a computer center on a recent evening, young Chinese could be seen
playing South Korean online games. Cyworld, the largest online community service
in South Korea, is announcing its arrival in China by plastering ads on city
buses.
Thanks to the Korean Wave and South Korea's new image, being Korean helps
business.
"I'm sure there is a connection, though we don't have exact figures," Jim
Sohn, the chief executive of LG Electronics China, said in an interview inside
the company's brand new $400 million headquarters here.
Another company that has benefited from the Korean Wave's "positive effect"
is Hyundai, said Um Kwang Heum, president of its Chinese division. Though a
latecomer to China, Hyundai signed a joint venture agreement with Beijing
Automotive Industry Holdings in 2002 and has already become No. 2 in sales among
automakers in China.
Thanks to its local partner, Hyundai's cars have been chosen by the Beijing
government to replace the city's aging taxis before the 2008 Beijing Olympics.
Hyundai Elantras will make up most of the city's taxi fleet in time for the
Olympics, which are expected to be a turning point for China, just as they
signaled South Korea's entry onto the world stage in 1988 and postwar Japan's in
1964.
For all of South Korea's influence in China, though, few Chinese expect the
Olympics and democratization to dovetail as they did in Seoul.
A local television production company, Beijing Modern English Film and TV
Culture, proposed a Korean-language program for adults in 2004 but was rejected
10 times by the Chinese authorities for unexplained reasons. Eventually, it
successfully pitched a cartoon, "Happy Imitation of Korean Sentences."
"As long as it was a kids' show, it was O.K.," said Sun Hogan, a producer at
the company.
"The government," he added, "is definitely a little nervous about the
popularity of the Korean Wave."
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