The New Cool Is Black
2009-06-29 10:38 am(This is an opinion piece about how black people are perceived in Korea published in The Korea Times.)
Being black has been at times problematic in my daily Korean life. Some Koreans believe what they have seen on Western TV and in movies: that black people are sexually pliant, ensconced in criminality, dangerous, uneducated, lazy, dirty, ugly and generally undesirable.
Recently, one of my professor colleagues, a Cuban-American, was asked by a summer camp recruiting agency, "Are you black? Because we are not hiring blacks for any positions this year."
I witnessed this on the phone in my office and was shocked, but not surprised. I'm filing a complaint with the Ministry of Labor in this regard.
Hagwon (English academies) are particularly susceptible to the desires of their customers. If many Korean parents find blacks unacceptable as educators, hagwon have a real financial incentive not to hire any.
This kind of rank racism is obviously disheartening, but also unveils something more sinister: Racial prejudice is not an isolated affair in Korean society, but ubiquitous, systemic, and reified by the very codes of educational institutions.
That very same day, a Korean-American professor read a simple Internet advertisement for Korean summer work, which read, in part: "if you are a Caucasian, and are from an English-speaking country, please apply..."
So, for some Koreans, not even another Korean will do. Racism works on a hierarchical structure. In my view, for some, and far too many, Koreans, all foreigners present a problem, but on the racial strata, whites are at the top, and the scale descends according to how dark you are ... As such, "colored" people are especially considered "the Other." Why?
Race, a conscription of optical prejudgment, psychologically links all peoples with the master signifier: whiteness. Put simply, whiteness is the (silent and unconscious) contrast by which all skin colors are measured. This is why white means white and "colored" means everyone else.
At a very famous English village a few summers ago, I drank a delicious strawberry smoothie everyday after work or for lunch. The owners, a husband and wife, were very kind to me and on the last day, gave me a free smoothie for patronizing them so faithfully.
He asked me where I was from. I told him "America." He said, "No, Africa!" This went on for about a minute. I angrily relayed this story to the wife, and she said many Korean children think that all black people come from Africa. But her husband was over 50.
He thought, as some do, that the normative, representative state of an American is a white person.
Aretha Franklin? Toni Morrison? Dr. W.E.B. Dubois? Bill Cosby? Michael Jackson? (Pre-plastic surgery, please.)
The hypocrisy of this is doubly disheartening. Rain, Big Bang, BoA, TVSQ, Mighty Mouth, Dynamic Duo, and a very large majority of Korean pop music's brightest stars liberally borrow and copy African-American music styles right down to the fashion. If some variants of black culture are so desirable for mass Korean consumption, why aren't black people equally engaged as, at the very least, human, on a fair and individual basis?
Being foreign in Korea already presents challenges, regardless of complexion: getting a cell phone, credit card, one's own apartment and even certain bank services can be unnecessarily difficult because of one's citizenship. Being of color need not and should not be an added burden.
Some Koreans, and I say some because I have been treated quite nicely by a great and many people, should "critically think" about their racial presumptions and prejudices. Where's the simpatico? The histories and experiences of Koreans and the African Diaspora are unique but not dissimilar, as both struggled and died to gain freedom and demand human dignity from brutal imperialist forces.
And I don't like hip-hop. OK, maybe a little.
The writer holds a master's degree in English literature and literary theory and is currently an English professor at Shingu University. He can be reached at deauwand@gmail.com.
Source
Being black has been at times problematic in my daily Korean life. Some Koreans believe what they have seen on Western TV and in movies: that black people are sexually pliant, ensconced in criminality, dangerous, uneducated, lazy, dirty, ugly and generally undesirable.
Recently, one of my professor colleagues, a Cuban-American, was asked by a summer camp recruiting agency, "Are you black? Because we are not hiring blacks for any positions this year."
I witnessed this on the phone in my office and was shocked, but not surprised. I'm filing a complaint with the Ministry of Labor in this regard.
Hagwon (English academies) are particularly susceptible to the desires of their customers. If many Korean parents find blacks unacceptable as educators, hagwon have a real financial incentive not to hire any.
This kind of rank racism is obviously disheartening, but also unveils something more sinister: Racial prejudice is not an isolated affair in Korean society, but ubiquitous, systemic, and reified by the very codes of educational institutions.
That very same day, a Korean-American professor read a simple Internet advertisement for Korean summer work, which read, in part: "if you are a Caucasian, and are from an English-speaking country, please apply..."
So, for some Koreans, not even another Korean will do. Racism works on a hierarchical structure. In my view, for some, and far too many, Koreans, all foreigners present a problem, but on the racial strata, whites are at the top, and the scale descends according to how dark you are ... As such, "colored" people are especially considered "the Other." Why?
Race, a conscription of optical prejudgment, psychologically links all peoples with the master signifier: whiteness. Put simply, whiteness is the (silent and unconscious) contrast by which all skin colors are measured. This is why white means white and "colored" means everyone else.
At a very famous English village a few summers ago, I drank a delicious strawberry smoothie everyday after work or for lunch. The owners, a husband and wife, were very kind to me and on the last day, gave me a free smoothie for patronizing them so faithfully.
He asked me where I was from. I told him "America." He said, "No, Africa!" This went on for about a minute. I angrily relayed this story to the wife, and she said many Korean children think that all black people come from Africa. But her husband was over 50.
He thought, as some do, that the normative, representative state of an American is a white person.
Aretha Franklin? Toni Morrison? Dr. W.E.B. Dubois? Bill Cosby? Michael Jackson? (Pre-plastic surgery, please.)
The hypocrisy of this is doubly disheartening. Rain, Big Bang, BoA, TVSQ, Mighty Mouth, Dynamic Duo, and a very large majority of Korean pop music's brightest stars liberally borrow and copy African-American music styles right down to the fashion. If some variants of black culture are so desirable for mass Korean consumption, why aren't black people equally engaged as, at the very least, human, on a fair and individual basis?
Being foreign in Korea already presents challenges, regardless of complexion: getting a cell phone, credit card, one's own apartment and even certain bank services can be unnecessarily difficult because of one's citizenship. Being of color need not and should not be an added burden.
Some Koreans, and I say some because I have been treated quite nicely by a great and many people, should "critically think" about their racial presumptions and prejudices. Where's the simpatico? The histories and experiences of Koreans and the African Diaspora are unique but not dissimilar, as both struggled and died to gain freedom and demand human dignity from brutal imperialist forces.
And I don't like hip-hop. OK, maybe a little.
The writer holds a master's degree in English literature and literary theory and is currently an English professor at Shingu University. He can be reached at deauwand@gmail.com.
Source
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Date: 2009-06-29 08:06 am (UTC)even more shocking is that they are so open about their racism o.O
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Date: 2009-06-29 08:06 am (UTC)insert michael jackson popcorn gif here
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Date: 2009-06-29 08:06 am (UTC)like one of SNSD has told (I don't know her name, this one skinny and highest) that he won't date a guy who has a skin lighter than her..
one big cultural shock is something that Korea needs..
I feel sorry for people who are treated badly because of a colour of their skin
but I know there are countries where black people still have to take of their shoes to walk on a sidewalk along with white people :/
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Date: 2009-06-29 08:51 am (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2009-06-29 08:08 am (UTC)wtf are they learning in school?
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Date: 2009-06-29 08:15 am (UTC):/ yeah, ok. . .
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Date: 2009-06-29 08:26 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-06-29 08:37 am (UTC)yeah, i completely agree.
imo, kpop would be a thing with out r&b influence.
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Date: 2009-06-29 08:32 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-06-29 08:32 am (UTC)wow what a downer, not that i didn't know these things already but its kind of discouraging to hear it again
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Date: 2009-06-29 08:53 am (UTC)Oh Korea. I still love you and I will blame this on ignorance.
Also: Has this topic ever come up on a program like Misuda/Chitchat of Beautiful Ladies? Because there are girls of all races and colors on that show and I would LOVE to hear that discussion. I REALLY want it addressed. Peacefully of course, but I want it to come out.
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Date: 2009-06-29 08:59 am (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2009-06-29 08:54 am (UTC)But anyway, I think the whole prejudice/close-mindedness is leaning more to just older generations. I mean I think most of us got over that whole white superiority thing LONG long ago...
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Date: 2009-06-29 09:04 am (UTC)Sorry, who? Is this a TVXQ cover band?
But yeah, iasfm with this article. And to think that at the root of this issue is primarily just bad education and ignorance because of it.
The sad part is that people here (most of Europe, I think?) think all Asians are Chinese when they see them. One of my old classmates at uni just assumed my half-black friend, who's dad is from the Antilles, was from Africa as well. Ignorance and stupidity isn't restricted to one country or one part of the world.
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Date: 2009-06-29 09:25 am (UTC)I didn't know whether to laugh or feel saddened at that kind of stupidity. I mean the girl was in uniersity for crying out loud.
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Date: 2009-06-29 09:52 am (UTC)this worries me i want a korean boy :(
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Date: 2009-06-29 10:07 am (UTC)Besides, the Koreans are a homogeneous race which has only recently just opened themselves up to foreigners. I won't really blame them for their misconception.
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Date: 2009-06-29 10:16 am (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2009-06-29 10:22 am (UTC)Aww, that's depressing! What if TVQX thinks that, way in the back of their minds? Or any other band?!?!
n-not that anything would have happened anyway, but...Oh, that's a scary thought...I could try to brave the country, but if things like that happen everyday, what's the point? :[
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Date: 2009-06-29 10:31 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-06-29 06:34 pm (UTC)What she said was ignorant, but not malicious.
Big Bang's Seungri said something similar but it was harder to forgive him for some reason....maybe because he's a hip-hop artist and should be more familiar with a culutre he's emulating? IDK.
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