'Becoming' North Koreans: Negotiating Gender and Class in Representations of North Korean Migrants on South Korean Television

This article examines how North Korean migrants become subjects of their own narratives in South Korean society, with a focus on gender and class divisions as represented on television programs such as Now on My Way to Meet You (Ije mannaro gamnida, 2011-present), Moranbong Club (Moranbongk'ulo...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inCross-currents (Honolulu, Hawaii) Vol. 7; no. 2; pp. 266 - 293
Main Author Ah Cho, Eun
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published University of Hawai'i Press 01.11.2018
University of Hawaii Press
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ISSN2158-9666
2158-9674
2158-9674
DOI10.1353/ach.2018.0009

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Summary:This article examines how North Korean migrants become subjects of their own narratives in South Korean society, with a focus on gender and class divisions as represented on television programs such as Now on My Way to Meet You (Ije mannaro gamnida, 2011-present), Moranbong Club (Moranbongk'ulop, 2015-present), and Unification of Love: Southern Men, Northern Women (Nam-nam-buk-nyo, 2014-2017). These shows aim to depict perfectly assimilated migrants who embody the South Korean government's image of an ideal citizen and thereby introduce an impression of "North Korean-ness" in the absence of input from the North Korea, a closed country. North Korean migrants "become" North Koreans within the programs' formats, with mixed results. On the one hand, a "double-paned window" perspective, which relies on the North Korean panelists' testimonies, complicates the programs' intended narrative of exemplary migrants. On the other hand, North Korean panelists actively fortify the binary gender frame of South Korean society. For example, North Korean male panelists become antagonists when their rough and unsophisticated characteristics appear to confirm South Korean men's superiority. These South Korean television programs focus on the polar concept of "Southern men and Northern women," thereby marginalizing North Korean male migrants and South Korean females. Such a stratified gender structure supports South Korean males' authority and strengthens the hetero-normative structure of South Korean society. KEYWORDS: North Korean migrants, South Korean television, Now on My Way to Meet You, Moranbong Club, Southern Men Northern Women, gender, class, South Korean conservatism
ISSN:2158-9666
2158-9674
2158-9674
DOI:10.1353/ach.2018.0009