Korean television drama and tourism.
Immense popularity in various areas in Asia, such as China, Japan, Singapore, Malaysia, Taiwan and Hong Kong, especially in countries/regions with large Chinese communities. This has generated a fervent desire for all things Korean in what is commonly termed the “Korean Wave” (Shim, 2004; Shim, 20...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-142402019-12-10T12:58:00Z Korean television drama and tourism. Chan, Brenda. Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information DRNTU::Social sciences::Mass media::Broadcasting::TV Immense popularity in various areas in Asia, such as China, Japan, Singapore, Malaysia, Taiwan and Hong Kong, especially in countries/regions with large Chinese communities. This has generated a fervent desire for all things Korean in what is commonly termed the “Korean Wave” (Shim, 2004; Shim, 2006). Scholars have identified cultural proximity (Straubhaar, 1991) as the main reason for the success of Korean TV dramas in Asian markets, particularly economies that are heavily influenced by Confucian values (Kim, 2004; Leung, 2004; Park, 2004). However, it has also been acknowledged that cultural proximity operates in a more complex dynamic in that there are multiple layers of proximity – geographical / spatial proximity, cultural / linguistic proximity (La Pastina & Straubhaar, 2005), perception of corporeal likeness and coevalness in economic conditions between the importing country and exporting country of the cultural products in question (Leung, 2004). Currently most research on the reception of Korean TV drama is focused on East Asian audiences in China, Hong Kong, Taiwan and Japan. Leung (2004) cautions that more research needs to be done in more Asian cultures, to understand if the appeal of Korean TV dramas across Asian countries lies in their portrayal of “Asian modernity” with conservative “Asian” family values. The purpose of this research project is twofold. Firstly it seeks to investigate the importance of different forms of cultural proximity in audiences’ preference for, and enjoyment of, Korean TV dramas. Secondly the research study also examines how the consumption of Korean TV dramas motivate viewers to visit South Korea for holiday. 2008-11-06T07:52:21Z 2008-11-06T07:52:21Z 2006 2006 Research Report http://hdl.handle.net/10356/14240 en 98 p. application/pdf |
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DRNTU::Social sciences::Mass media::Broadcasting::TV Chan, Brenda. Korean television drama and tourism. |
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Immense popularity in various areas in Asia, such as China, Japan, Singapore, Malaysia, Taiwan and Hong Kong, especially in countries/regions with large
Chinese communities. This has generated a fervent desire for all things Korean in what is
commonly termed the “Korean Wave” (Shim, 2004; Shim, 2006). Scholars have identified cultural proximity (Straubhaar, 1991) as the main reason for the success of Korean TV dramas in Asian markets, particularly economies that are heavily influenced by Confucian values (Kim, 2004; Leung, 2004; Park, 2004). However, it has also been
acknowledged that cultural proximity operates in a more complex dynamic in that there are multiple layers of proximity – geographical / spatial proximity, cultural / linguistic
proximity (La Pastina & Straubhaar, 2005), perception of corporeal likeness and coevalness
in economic conditions between the importing country and exporting country of the cultural products in question (Leung, 2004). Currently most research on the reception of Korean TV drama is focused on East Asian audiences in China, Hong Kong, Taiwan and Japan. Leung (2004) cautions that more research needs to be done in more Asian
cultures, to understand if the appeal of Korean TV dramas across Asian countries lies in their portrayal of “Asian modernity” with conservative “Asian” family values.
The purpose of this research project is twofold. Firstly it seeks to investigate the
importance of different forms of cultural proximity in audiences’ preference for, and
enjoyment of, Korean TV dramas. Secondly the research study also examines how the
consumption of Korean TV dramas motivate viewers to visit South Korea for holiday. |
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Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information |
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Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information Chan, Brenda. |
format |
Research Report |
author |
Chan, Brenda. |
author_sort |
Chan, Brenda. |
title |
Korean television drama and tourism. |
title_short |
Korean television drama and tourism. |
title_full |
Korean television drama and tourism. |
title_fullStr |
Korean television drama and tourism. |
title_full_unstemmed |
Korean television drama and tourism. |
title_sort |
korean television drama and tourism. |
publishDate |
2008 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10356/14240 |
_version_ |
1681035024303915008 |