Part I. Emergence of K-pop
Chapter 1. Emergence of K-pop as Transnational Popular Culture
Chapter 2. K-pop Entertainment Industry in the 21st Century
Chapter 3. Idol Formation Reality Shows as K-pop’s New Star
System
Part II. Entertainment Houses and Training Idol Groups
Chapter 4. A Secret Door Finally Opened: Assistant Director and
Trainees United
Chapter 5. Sweat and Tears in the Studios
Chapter 6. The Shadows in Spartan Training and the Pre-debut
Chapter 7. A Country Girl who Dreams of an Idol Star
Chapter 8. The Long Road to Stardom
Part III. Borders between Becoming Stars and Disappearing
Chapter 9. Competition, Sorrow and Love
Chapter 10. Tears, Idols, and K-pop
Chapter 11. Going Overseas and a Few Stars
Hark Joon Lee is a journalist and film maker.
Dal Yong Jin is professor of communication at Simon Fraser
University.
This book’s close observation and analysis of the inside of K-pop
industry and its idol system offer insightful understanding of how
the K-pop industry operates and K-pop idols engage with the
factory-like star system. This engaging book, which presents a
gripping story and examination of the underside of K-pop, is not
only a timely addition to the growing number of studies on K-pop,
but also an invaluable contribution to the studies of popular
culture, music industries, celebrities, and cultural globalization.
The book is highly recommended for anyone interested in popular
music industries and celebrity culture in general and the recent
K-pop phenomenon in particular.
*Kyong Yoon, University of British Columbia Okanagan*
The two co-authors of this volume have in recent years garnered
considerable reputations, Hark Joon Lee as a filmmaker and
journalist known particularly for his work with North Korean
refugees and for the film `Nine Muses of Star Empire’, and Dal Yong
Jin as the author of a well-received series of books about K-pop
and Korea’s media and gaming industries. This volume provides the
back story for the Nine Muses film, bringing the talents of the two
to document how the K-pop idol group of the same name was created.
Where many previous accounts of K-pop have been largely
descriptive, and a few try to be far too theoretical, this account
moves between a documentary and an academic text. It brings our
knowledge up to date, shining a spotlight on Korea’s entertainment
mega-agencies, and the dreams and realities faced by those who
succeed or fail in becoming stars. The agencies impose harsh
training regimes as they create plastic surgery-enhanced robotic
idols, demanding conformity, requiring sexy dancing and pouting,
and casting aside those who fail to be perfectly compliant (or, in
one case documented here, who want to fall in love). This, then, is
the hidden story behind K-pop, a story that we deserve to know now
that K-pop has become such a massive international phenomenon.
*Keith Howard, University of London*
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