Social Science Japan Journal Advance Access originally published online on November 15, 2007
Social Science Japan Journal 2007 10(2):197-216; doi:10.1093/ssjj/jym049
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Social Science Japan Journal 10:197-216 (2007)
© 2007 Oxford University Press
The Potential of Fandom and the Limits of Soft Power: Media Representations on the Popularity of a Korean Melodrama in Japan
HAYASHI Kaori is an Associate Professor in the Interfaculty Initiative in Information Studies, University of Tokyo. She is the author of Fuyusona ni Hamatta Watakushitachi. Junai, Namida, Masukomi ... soshite Kankoku (Why We Love Winter Sonata So Much: Pure Love, Tears, Mass Media and South Korea) (Tokyo: Bunshun Shinsho, 2005) and Masumedeia no Sh
en, Jy
narizumu no Kakushin (The Periphery of Mass Media, The Heart of Journalism) (Tokyo: Shiny
sha, 2002). She can be reached at Interfaculty Initiative in Information Studies, The University of Tokyo, 7-3-1 Hongo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113-0033, Japan, or by e-mail at hayashik{at}iii.u-tokyo.ac.jp
Eun-Jeung LEE is an Associate Professor in the Institute for Political Science, Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg. She is the author of Korea im Demokratischen Aufschwung (Korea in Democratic Take-off) (Leipzig: Leipzig University Press, 2005) and Anti-Europa—Die Geschichte der Rezeption des Konfuzianismus und der konfuzianischen Gesellschaft seit der frühen (Anti-Europe—The History of the Reception of Confucianism in Europe) (Münster: Lit, 2003). She can be reached at the Institute for Political Science, Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg, Emil-Abderhalden-Strasse 7, 06099 Halle, Germany, or by e-mail at Eun-Jeung.Lee{at}gmx.net
This paper examines Japanese and Korean representations of the audience, fandom and popularity of the Korean drama Winter Sonata as it emerged in media discourse in Japan from the beginning of 2004 through the first half of 2005 to better understand the potential and limits of soft power. In the course of the emergent Korea Boom in Japan in 2004 and 2005, narratives in the media describing the Japanese audience of Winter Sonata differed widely between Japan and South Korea. This paper looks at this gap, examines why and how this discrepancy of fandom representations occurs and what this means to both societies. In Japan, the mainstream media discourse on the popularity of Winter Sonata or the Korean Wave was reduced to the image of middle-aged female fans seeking romance stories and good-looking actors. Rather than taking seriously the activities of Japanese women as they reached across borders to its Asian neighbor and former colony, the Japanese mass media stereotyped and derided Japanese women in the pejorative language of fandom. In South Korea, on the other hand, the media discourse was first and foremost self-centered and nationalistic, but this focus led both conservative and liberal commentators to extend the discussion further to include discussion of an imagined Asian community. Amid this celebration of Korea's growing cultural influence in Asia, women, who were the main driving force of its popularity in Japan, were elided from the Korean discourse on this phenomenon.
* We appreciate the assistance of David Buist and Alex Hambleton for their careful and competent proofreading. We also thank the Editorial Board and referees of SSJJ for their constructive comments and advice on an earlier draft. We are also grateful to Hilaria Goessmann for giving us comments and suggestions. We had an exciting cross-cultural collaboration on the theme of Hallyu.