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religion in Korea and the world

The Korea Times has an article about the religious affiliation of Korean presidents.  It is interesting how many are/were Christian in this traditionally Buddhist country.

I am interested to read the distinction between Christians and Catholics.

According to a 2005 survey, Buddhists make up 22.8 percent of the population, followed by Christianity with 18.3 percent and Catholicism with 10.9 percent.

—————

Abroad, those catholics may be trying to hide under the general title of Christian after the Pope described “the rape of little boys by priests” as “petty gossip“.  I guess Kim Kim-tae petty gossiped that girl to death.

—–

These two events don’t really fit together.  I just had to fit my disgust with the Catholic church in somewhere.


A Mighty Weekend

It began with sushi.

There's a terrific new sushi restaurant near my place. It's a Japanese chain and very cheap - most everything is only 1,500 won. The place is large and brightly lit, with four separate conveyor belts that carry all types of fishy goodness. Each table has its own touch screen, on which you order anything that you don't already see cruising by. The order is sent back to the kitchen, where the food or drink is then placed on a bullet train, which shoots it to your table on a track above the belt. It's all wacky Jappy and completely awesome. I want to go every day.

Jem and I ate our fill and then headed to Conor Murphy's place, to meet up before our show. He had some people over and they had already polished off several bottles of wine; his buddy Nick had moved on from the vino and was drinking soju straight from the bottle. Ah, youth. He was already teetering and we had yet to even set foot in the club. Anthony and Violet from Poko Lambro were there as well, and we shot the shit, mainly talking about guitars. Anthony's in the market for a U.S. made Fender Telecaster. If anyone here in the Special K has a line on one, let me know.

After dusting off the last of the wine we made our way to METAL CITY, a new bar/music club open in Seomyeon. It's a snazzy venue with good sound and an extremely generous owner. Conor and I were playing solo sets, and he went up first, staggering from the wine. Conor's from Northern Ireland and sings like a means it, pure and angsty Gaelic soul. He's got a good collection of original tunes, with a couple that'll really knock your socks off. The crazy thing is that he's just a pup - 23 or so. Watch out for this kid 10 years from now.

The owner kept chucking Jager shots our way and after his first set Conor was fucked. I followed him with some solo stuff, and later invited Ryan, the drummer from my band The Headaches, to join me on a few tunes just guitar and drums - White Stripes style. Conor and Nick proceeded to sloppily hop about and then wrestle with each other to the rockin' beat of the songs, slamming into chairs and getting really messy.

After my set I sat with Jem and some of my friends. Conor and Nick were still drunkenly fucking with each other. At one point Nick grabbed Conor's necklace (Conor's a bit of a dandy) and ripped it from his neck. Conor responded with a LIGHTENING QUICK HEAD BUTT, smashing and bloodying Nick's nose. Nick objected to Conor's "Liverpool kiss," and attempted a few sloppy swings, but we held him back and within ten minutes they were once again arm in arm, buying each other even more drinks.

Ah, the example we set. The best and the brightest of a generation. Just like my song.

* * *

On Saturday Jem and I woke up, ate kimbab, dwaenjang jjigae and ramyeon, and took the train to the Asia Mart in Sasang, to buy last minute supplies for the upcoming EPIC THAI FEED. Upon arriving, we were deflated to discover that all of the limes had been sold out. The Pakistani owner of the place had assured us the week before that, from then on, he would always have limes. He had grossly underestimated the demand however, and they had been snagged up. His Korean wife informed us that the next shipment (from Vietnam) would not arrive for another week. We were screwed, since the next day we were to cook mass amounts of Thai food, with fresh lime being one of the key ingredients. We managed to pick up a bottle of Thai lime juice, however, which ended up working in a pinch. But the lack of limes in Korea is a head scratcher. They are nowhere to be found. Koreans eat no limes.

That evening we joined John Bosckay for his birthday dinner, where we ate lots and lots of grilled meat. K, always hip to the best Korean barbecue joints, led us into a new place in Kyungsung that lived up to the hype. We feased on "galmaegi sal" and washed it down with beer, baeksaeju, and a bit of soju. After congratulating John on his last year of his 30's (we're the same age), Jem and I went to the Radio Cafe and caught about 30 minutes of "Wordz Only," which is K's new spoken word open mike, a kind of child of the old "Poetry Plus." When I walked in, some brooding dark hair kid was reading earnest, senstive pieces that sound as if they were penned by a depressed 14-year old bulemic goth girl. I was cringing but they were slightly entertaining in their sheer badness. K got up and knocked a couple out of the park, and we were oh so lucky to witness Sam actually taking the mike. He read a hilarious drunken email he had once written to his girlfriend Rosh. It was funny and really offensive and I'm insisting that he reprise the act at this Friday's Ha-Ha Hole comedy open mike.

The last part of the night found Jem and me in Gimhae, where I was joined by my rock and roll band, The Headaches. We had a gig at the Tandoori Bar, which is the only expat watering hole in that unfortunate Busan orbital town. The turnout was decent, though, and we rocked and some of them danced and several people bought me drinks after [info] sent out a "buy Tharp a drink" directive on facebook to all his people out there, since he had spent two years doing the hagwon grind there. All in all a good time, despite the fact that all of the band's guarantee went for paying taxi fare.

* * *

It ended with Thai food.

Jem and I woke up at about noon on Sunday, made a quick run to Costco for shrimp, chicken, and pork, came home, and cooked. And cooked. And cooked and cooked and cooked. I hosted a dinner party that had somehow grown from six guests to about sixteen. By seven that night my smallish apartment was packed with friends who chatted, drank, and took in the exotic Thai aromas swirling through the air: chili, lime, lemongrass, onion, garlic.... the wonder of it all. I prepared two red curries (chicken and shrimp). Jem took care of the following: tom yam kung (sour shrimp/squid soup), pad thai, pork laap, and another coconut-milk chicken soup that finished the medley. People dug in and ate heartily. Scott's new girl, Mandy, made strawberry and chocolate crepes. Wine turned to beer which turned to gin and vodka. As the evening wore on the crowd thinned, until a handful of us sat around and listened to Anthony and Kurt (who had both worked professional back home) trade gig-from-hell war stories. Anthony's tale of playing with "Blade," the bass player for "Seal," definitely took the cake. Buy him a beer and ask about it sometime. It's one of the best I've come across yet.

* * *

I've had some epic weekends in Korea, but the last one just may win for pure activity. The only downside is that with all the running around, prep, and cooking, that I actually got very little rest, and just want to hibernate this week. It's been a serious struggle just to keep my eyes open for the last two days, but aside from timie for the odd nap, I just got too much stuff going on.

tell me what you know about dreams

Friday was suppose to be a quiet night ...  it wasn't.

Welcome to Club Womb.
The Dj boys got the kids dancing ....











There were alot of boys in the womb that night.
Some were scary ...




.... some were nice ...
... and some were the best damn friends a girl could hope for. 








After we emerged from the Womb we wandered the streets until Doogie picked us up in his fancy van and brough us back to the mansion ..

My quiet night ended at 6:30am.

Life in Korea: Traveling Korea by bus


Author's note: 'Life in Korea' posts are aimed at the newer expats among us. If you have a more experienced perspective to offer, please share in the comments. I've also recently written about traveling rural Korea by bus - a similar subject also worth reading about if getting off the typical tourists path.

Traveling by express bus is one of the easiest and cheapest ways to get around Korea. The country also has an extensive system of trains that go many places, but buses can be more direct and are usually more comfortable. While there is a bit of a learning curve at first, a couple trips will make you feel more independent in your travels. Note that being able to read hangeul is highly recommended - even if you're slow at it, it's easier to find the place you're looking for if you can spot it in the Korean alphabet.

For many major destinations from Seoul's Express Bus Terminal, express buses leave frequently (leaving every half an hour or more often) - no need to plan ahead for these destinations. Show up, buy a ticket for the bus leaving next, and get on. Quite a few smaller cities have buses that leave occasionally (once every half an hour to two hours); it's only the furthest or smallest cities that offer buses leaving rarely (a handful of buses leaving per day). To see how often your bus runs, check out this page on VisitKorea - both origin and destination are neatly sorted by province and city, whether you're traveling from Seoul or any other part of Korea. Bear in mind that traveling from elsewhere in Korea means the bus schedules will change. Living in Busan? There will be a lot more buses that travel to nearby Ulsan than a tiny city in Gangwon-do.

Seoul's Express Bus Terminal has two large buildings that serve three major bus lines: the Gyeongbu line and Yeongdong line are serviced out of the older building, while the Honam line is serviced out of the newer building. While you're underground this won't make much sense, but you get inside the terminals it will. Trust me when I say the subway station (lines 3, 7, and 9 all converge here) and connected bus terminal is a maze. It's all interconnected, yet covers a huge amount of area. There are tons of signs while at the subway levels, yet those signs always seem hard to find when looking for them. Arrive extra early if it's your first time.

Worth noting:
don't confuse the word 'line' with the train lines - the train routes and the highway routes aren't the same. For more information than you ever wanted to know about Korea's roads and expressways, Wikipedia is your best friend. As a rough guideline, the Gyeongbu 'line' heads towards Busan, while the Honam 'line' heads towards Mokpo in southwest South Korea and the Yeongdong 'line' heads east towards Gangwon-do.

Also worth noting: most of the major cities around Korea have more than one bus terminal. Seoul has the Express Bus Terminal (sometimes called Gangnam), the Nambu Bus Terminal (sometimes called 'South Seoul'), and a couple smaller ones in Gangbyeon ('Dong Seoul') and near Sangbong station. Busan has the Central Bus Terminal in Nopo-dong, which also shares a building with the Busan Dongbu Gyeongnam Intercity Bus Terminal. Don't forget about the Seobu Bus Terminal (Sasang station, Busan subway line 1, exit 1). The city of Daejeon has several bus terminals, though most are clustered near each other.

Here is an alphabetical listing of dozens of destinations (from Seoul's Express Bus Terminal) - use it to figure out which building to go to:

Destination Line
Ancheon Honam
Andong Honam
Anmyeondo Honam
Anseong Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Beolgyo Honam
Boryeong Honam
Boseong Honam
Buan Honam
Bukcheongju (south Cheongju) Honam
Busan Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Changwon Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Cheolwon Honam
Cheonan Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Cheongju Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Cheongju Honam
Cheongpyeong Honam
Cheongyang Honam
Cheungju Honam
Chuncheon Honam
Daegu hanjin Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Daejeon Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Daejeon cheongsa Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Damyang Honam
Dangjin Honam
Donghae Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Gangchon Honam
Gangjin Honam
Gangreung Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Geumsan Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Gimcheon Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Gimhae Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Gimje Honam
Gochang Honam
Godaehongdae Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Goheung Honam
Gongju Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Gumi Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Gunsan Honam
Gwangju Honam
Gyeongju Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Haenam Honam
Hampyeong Honam
Heungdeok Honam
Hongseong Honam
Hwacheon Honam
Hwanggan Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Ichon Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Iksan Honam
Jamcheon Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Jangheung Honam
Jangseong Honam
Jeomchon Honam
Jeongeup Honam
Jeongsan Honam
Jeonju Honam
Jido Honam
Jinan Honam
Jindo Honam
Jinju Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Jipori Honam
Jochiwon Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Masan Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Mokpo Honam
Muan Honam
Naju Honam
Namwon Honam
Nokdong Honam
Nonsan Honam
Onyang Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Pocheon Honam
Pohang Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Pyeongtaek Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Samcheok Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Sangju Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Seodaeju (east Daeju) Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Seosan Honam
Sokcho Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Sunchang Honam
Suncheon Honam
Taean Honam
Tongyeong Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Ulsan Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Uncheon Honam
Wando Honam
Wonju Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Yangyang Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Yeocheon Honam
Yeoju Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Yeongam Honam
Yeongcheon Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Yeonggwang Honam
Yeongju Honam
Yeongsanpo Honam
Yeongwol Honam
Yeonmudae Honam
Yeosu Honam
Yesan Honam
Yongin Gyeongbu / Yeongdong
Yuseong (western Daejeon)
Honam

If you've never taken a bus from one point in Korea to another point, the three main steps are fairly simple:

Step one: buy a ticket. Get to the window, announce your destination (and how many tickets you need). Pay for your tickets, then ask or look for what time the bus leaves and what platform it leaves from. It may or may not be printed on the ticket - heck, the seat number may or may not be printed on the ticket - so find out. The printed signs will help, but the bus drivers and ticket sellers seemingly know all.

Step two: find your platform. The opening picture of this post comes from Seoul's Express Bus Terminal - one of the largest and most foreboding terminals around Korea. If 37 platforms don't faze you, there's a fair chance nothing will.

Step three: use the restroom, buy your snacks and drinks, etc.. While most bus rides over two hours will take a rest break at a fairly well-equipped rest stop, bring what you want onto the bus. The drinks and snacks, that is. It's good form to use the same bag to haul your trash out - and saves the bus driver a bit of inevitable clean-up work. Don't be that inconsiderate foreigner - there will be trash cans just after you disembark.

That's it. Buses really are pretty straightforward in Korea. The biggest trick is knowing where you want to go, and how often the buses come. If you need to be at the terminal for the first bus at 7:30am, it's good to know that the night before so you can get to bed early. If there's a bus that leaves at, say, 11pm, and arrives in the wee hours of the morning, that might save you some time traveling on a Saturday.

Experienced expats - any final words on traveling via bus?

Creative Commons License © Chris Backe - 2010

This post was originally published on my blog, Chris in South Korea. If you are reading this on another website and there is no linkback or credit given, you are reading an UNAUTHORIZED FEED.

 

Fat Korea?

I was actually a tiny bit meanly pleased when I saw this article in the Korea Herald this morning: "One-third of adults overweight." This is terribly mean of me, after all, Koreans are still far less obese than Americans. After all the CDC published that:
  • Percent of noninstitutionalized adults age 20 years and over who are overweight or obese: 67% (2005-2006)
  • Percent of noninstitutionalized adults age 20 years and over who are obese: 34% (2005-2006) (http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/fastats/overwt.htm).
However, during my phone interview with the district superintendent I was treated to a 10 minute lecture on how disgustingly obese all Americans are and how wonderfully thin ALL Koreans are. I am not, nor have I ever been obese or even mildly overweight. I was slightly disturbed to be asked my weight following that rant, even though theoretically I KNOW that it isn't considered a rude question in Korean etiquette. I politely pointed out that my resume photo included my full body--he could see for himself that I wasn't obese.

Back to the article, the Korea Herald cites stress, drinking, reduction in proper exercise, eating and sleeping habits as being the main causes of the increase in obesity. Now, I will allow that all of those are extremely key to maintaining a healthy weight. However, I'd also like to point out the increased influence of Western food being a lovely culprit. My kids favorite food when asked on surveys, is never ever kimbap, bibimbap or even kimchi. It's almost always 'pizza! McDonalds! ice cream!' Eating that stuff will get you fat in a hurry. Combine the move away from traditional foods with a move toward crappier habits and that will most definitely lead to obesity.

Happy Monday everyone!
Spaz update: trying to understand tax forms makes me feel like a spaz, regardless of spastic actions actually taken. I think I shall take the advice of my friend and use TurboTax online. Being a responsible, independent adult kind of sucks on occasion.

Korean Gender Reader: 29 March 2010

( Source: KorAm )

1) “Asian Man Interracial Dating History”

An interesting photographic essay, provided at complex.com (via: The Marmot’s Hole).

2) The Security Implications of Korea’s Low Birthrate

Over at Asian Security and US Foreign Relations Blog, professor Robert Kelly of Pusan National University elaborates on a brief talk on this he had in his weekly segment on Busan e-fm. A very wide-ranging topic, for more information see here for a similar post on my own, albeit more on China, and last week’s Korean Gender Reader for more on recent draconian shifts in government policy on abortion (basically criminalizing it), and only really explicable in light of the above.

In addition, related stories that have emerged this week include: first, the fact that the Korean marriage rate has fallen to an all-time low. According to The Chosun Ilbo:

The rate of newly-registered marriages fell to an all-time low in 2009 amid the economic slump. The number of marriages per 1,000 persons stood at 6.2 last year, down 0.4 from 2008 and the lowest since statistics began in 1970.

The average age for first-time marriages rose as more people are choosing to marry later in life. Men married at an average age of 31.6 last year, up 0.2 years from a year earlier, and women at 28.7, up 0.4 years.

With The Joongang Daily adding the helpful graphic on the right in its own report (via: ROK Drop).

And secondly, and very tellingly, an interview at Oh My News of the OECD economist William Adema, whose job it is to collect and analyze data from all 30-member states on their birthrates and family polices, reveals that:

…[for] the last 8 years of his 16 with the organization, Adema has spent working on the issue, one country has been of particular interest: Korea.

This is in part, he said Tuesday, because Korea is changing so rapidly. It is also obvious that he enjoys a challenge: some of the most basic data he needs to understand Korean families does not exist.

The Korean Bureau of Statistics does not collect the maternal employment rate; it is assumed that once women have children, they will leave the workplace.

Adding to the challenge, the Oxford trained economist explained that it will take far more than government policy to increase Korea’s lowest-in-the-OECD birthrate

My emphasis, and, alas, no great surprise when Korea has the lowest female workforce participation rate in the OECD.

Finally, Brian in Jeollanam-do provides an excellent summary of the politics of recent (see #6 last week) banning of marriages to South Korean men (and only men) by the Cambodian government, the previous huge bride industry an obvious corollary of all the above.

Update 1 : On a rare positive note, albeit still a drop in the ocean compared to what is really required, the government announced increased state subsidies for medical costs related to childbirth from next month, and those for expectant mothers….within 2 years.

Update 2: In a recent interview with US journalists, Minister of Gender Equality and Family Affairs Paik Hee-young (백희영) pointed out that Korea has the largest gender wage gap in the OECD not because women make less money than men in the same position, but because “men hold higher positions.” What a relief!

Update 3: By no means the cause of the Lee Myung-bak Administration’s crackdown on abortion, but not entirely irrelevant either, membership of the Catholic Church is increasing in Korea. With the proviso that the news is coming from a Catholic website, read the details at AsiaNews here.

( Suprise Yr Pregnant by PinkMoose )

3) Women with Children are Less Likely to Commit Suicide

From a Taiwanese survey of 30 years of data on 1.3 million Taiwanese women, and news that quickly went viral around the world: see here for The Daily Mail’s report on it for instance.

Probably the universal appeal of the news lies in that it appears to be common-sense. And indeed, if you can forgive the personal note, and it possibly sounding a little cliched, as a father I can confirm that on off-days (and with 2 toddlers, you get many off-days!), the knowledge that your children are relying on you to do always do your best for them helps you to snap you out of your depression much quicker than you would otherwise. But as the sociologist Kate Fox also points out, whose bestseller Watching the English: The Hidden Rules of English Behaviour (2004) I happen to be reading at the moment:

…it is nonetheless nice, I think, to have our instinctive ‘knowledge’ of such matters properly measured and confirmed by objective research. Being a social scientist is a pretty thankless job, particularly among the ever-cynical English, who generally dismiss all of our findings as either obvious (when they accord with ‘common knowledge’) or rubbish (when they challenge some tenet of popular wisdom) or mumbo-jumbo (when it is not clear which sin has been committed, as the findings are couched in incomprehensible academic jargon). (pp. 200-201)

Regardless, unfortunately Korea has the highest suicide in the OECD again: see Brian in Jeollanam-do for a discussion, to which I would add this Chosun Ilbo editorial.

4) Music Video Banned

Foxy (폭시), a new girl group expected to gain a lot of attention due to Han Jang-hee (한장희) being one the members (the woman who became famous as “Elf Girl” during the 2006 World Cup), has had their music video for Why Are You Doing This to Me (왜 이러니) above banned from SBS, KBS, and MBC for “promoting sexual relationships.”

In light of more provocative music videos that weren’t banned, general reactions at k-pop blogs like allkpop and Omona! They Didn’t range from mild surprise to sheer incredulity; see here, here, and #1 here for more on the seemingly completely arbitrary nature of Korean censorship, which this case reaffirms.

5) Koreans Overdose on Diet Pills

No great surprise to long-term readers of this blog of course, according to The Chosun Ilbo, “Korea’s use of slimming pills and appetite suppressants ranks near the top in the world despite an obesity rate of 3.5 percent, only a quarter of the OECD’s average 14.6 percent.”

It also notes the paradox of one of the skinniest countries in the world consuming the largest amount of diet drugs in the world; but surely these are simply two sides of the same coin?

( See here for a discussion of this advertisement )

In related celebrity news, Nicole Jung (정용주) of the girl-group KARA (카라) revealed early last week that she went on a diet last year because a unidentified member of a boy-group told her she was too fat. But a couple of days later she revealed who he was, before finally breaking down in tears over the harshness of her diet regimen on Friday.

6) “Internet Teen Prostitution Becomes Out of Control”

A bit of hyperbole from a non-native speaker perhaps, especially in light of similar previous cases. But still, I’m glad Youngbee Dale’s article drew my attention to this:

On March 4th, 2010, police arrested a 28 year old man who solicited sex from two sisters. The man met the sisters on the internet chat. He bought a 12 year old victim drink and a pack of cigarettes and taught her how to drive in exchange of sex. He also solicited her 14 year old sister for sex in the same way. According to the report, the perpetrator knew that the victims’ parents were often absent from their lives, and used it to take advantage of them.

7) Korean “Chick-lit” Becoming Popular

A brief survey by Charles Montgomery at Korean Modern Literature in Translation, who notes that (my emphasis):

…chick-lit in Korea is a direct outgrowth of the introduction of chick-lit from the west….this introduction substantially altered Korean publishing, introducing a homegrown, but culturally western, Korean “Chick Lit”…

8) The Tough Life of Wannabees at Korean Star Factories

Extra! Korea and SeoulBeats both provide excellent analyses of this Chousn Ilbo article of the above title, the latter of which begins thus:

In a recent article from the Chosun Ilbo, author Choi Seung-hyun discusses Korea’s newest threat to their obedient, well-structured society: superstardom. It used to be so, that the country’s best and brightest aspired to be scientists and doctors, those time-honored traditional professions that would make any parent beam with pride; this is no longer the case, claims Choi.

“In 1983, a popular children’s magazine conducted a survey of 6,595 schoolchildren asking them what they wanted to be when they grew up. Their top choice was scientist with 23.3 percent, followed by teacher (14.1 percent), judge (11.5 percent), doctor (11 percent) and artist (7.8 percent). When asked what would bring them happiness, 63 percent of them said living a worthwhile life. When those children entered university, the Physics Department at Seoul National University was the preferred choice among applicants that drew the brightest minds from across the country.”

Of course fast-forward twenty years later, and things are a bit different…

9) Man Wanted for Domestic Violence Leads 20 Police Cars, Helicopter on Chase (Japan)

Hopefully evidence of last week’s news (see #13 here) that the Japanese police is getting tougher on domestic violence, and women more likely to report it: see The Mainichi Daily News for the details (via: Lawyer_KOREA)

10) Gays and Lesbians Spotlight Discrimination in the Workforce

With apologies for forgetting to include it last week, Korea Beat translated a Korean article on the subject from OhMyNews:

“No girl(boy)friend? Why don’t you get married?” For gays and lesbians, those questions are light jokes. At work or anywhere else, for sexual minorities they are a torment. They may laugh outwardly for their co-workers, but inwardly they are wounded.

At 7 pm on March 5 a “Sexual Minorities and the Workforce” press conference was held at Women’s Plaza, and brought up several types of workplace discrimination that heterosexuals are unaware of. Solidarity for LGBT Human Rights of Korea (동성애자인권연대) and other organizations for sexual minorities publicized the results of interviews conducted last December with five lesbians and five gay men.

Read the rest here.

11) Korean Women Inventors

The Korea Times interviewed Han Mi-young (한미영), president of the Korea Women Inventors Association (KWIA; 한국여성경제단체연합), and which is preparing its third Korea International Women’s Investors Exposition, which will be held at COEX, southern Seoul, from May 6 to 9.

While I’m on the subject, let me also mention the cool group Girls in Tech Korea, which I follow on Twitter.

12) On Pink…

Finally, in news that will challenge your associations with pink clothes, and of the Korean men therein, Sociological Images provides evidence that in Western countries at least, pink didn’t stabilize itself as a girls-only color until at least the 1960s.

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Filed under: Korean Gender Reader
  

 

The Kite Runner

The 40th Busan International Kite Festival was held this weekend, so yesterday we went along to watch and fly kites of our own around the periphery of the event, which apparently is the done thing. This involved actually buying a kite first, but given that kite flying is a reasonably popular activity in Busan, it isn't that difficult to find shops selling them in appropriate locations.

The Festival was being held at Dadaepo Beach. During my first 18-month stay in Korea, and even though some of it was a bit of a blur, I'm fairly sure I only visited Dadaepo Beach once, and that was only in passing as a break between driving from one place to another. In the last three months, I've been back there for the Last Sunset Festival, the Jeongweol Daeboreum Festival and now the International Kite Festival. Suddenly, Dadaepo Beach seems to be a hive of festival activity.


Like many things I experience in Korea, I had no few preconceived ideas as to what to expect, but having never seen one-hundred foot long kites before, I was in for a surprise when they swung into view over Dadaepo Bay. It looked exciting. There were festival tents and a large banner promised 'Folk Games Big Party'. But in truth, not a lot seemed to be actually happening - or not in an organised way at least. Dadaepo Beach was full of people flying their kites in a private capacity. Most were small but there were obviously a few more hard-core individuals controlling larger - and noisier - aerial displays. It seems I also hadn't realised that by fitting a kite with an audible device, the swooping and diving can be accompanied by a rather alarming noise.




But while flying a kite may offer some interactivity, watching people keep their kites in the air wasn't much of a spectator sport, so I wandered down the beach where I thought I'd spotted Korean Batman, who actually turned out to be a kitesurfer getting ready to take to the water.


In fact, some kitesurfers were already in the water. It was unclear whether they had any connection with the Festival or merely happened to be doing what they always did on a Sunday afternoon. I rather suspected the latter. Dadaepo Beach seems to be one of those 'anything goes' type of places.


Back at the tents a few people were playing traditional Korean games, one of which involved throwing an arrow into a cylindrical tube. But generally, while there were a lot of tents, not much was happening in most of them. A few had kites on display, while many of the others were either empty or had been commandeered by people to sit down in.


I understand that Saturday saw the elimination rounds of a kite competition and that Sunday would therefore see the finals. This might have explained the apparent lack of official activity. I can't say what stage of the final it was that eventually did begin, but two men took to different podiums on the beach and readied their kites. If the judge venting his anger at both competitors was anything to go by, this was a very serious business. Apparently this was to be a 'kite fight'. It wasn't at all clear what this involved but as I watched both kites in the air positioning themselves it seemed to have all the excitement of a slow game of chess. The friends we'd come with wanted to go and eat what would be a very late lunch so we left at this point. I didn't feel I was missing much, which is a pity because afterwards I learned that Kite Fighting is a proper sport in Korea and it certainly sounds like it gets more interesting than anything I saw. As we walked to our car, one of the men could be seen running to pick up his severed kite.


Generally, the 40th Busan International Kite Festival was interesting, but oddly anarchic.

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What students need to learn

This T-shirt appears to list the basics of what any responsible student should know.


In Which Pollution Kicks My Butt

This weekend I let pollution kick my butt. Saturday I alternated between sleeping, eating, reading and blowing my nose. I did make it out for an evening of Scrabble and cocktails at the Hemingway (I won!) but was home by midnight. Such an exciting life I lead.

Today I went into town to get groceries and to fortify myself for the Sunday Emart rush, I got a latte and picked up my coffee first, rather than as a treat for making it out alive. My favorite coffee shop is trying to kill me though. They won't sell me a pound of coffee. They won't sell me more than 100 grams of ground coffee because they are convinced that by the time I get through it all it won't be perfectly fresh. Which is true, it WILL take me an entire week or two to get through it. But even if it was a month old, I would still drink it. Stale coffee is much better than me attempting to teach without having had any coffee. Sometimes I convince them to sell me more, and promise to drink it up before it goes stale but today I didn't have the energy and settled for the paltry 100 grams. Maybe on Wednesday, when I'm all out of coffee I shall whip out my super amazing Konglish skills for the argument.

I wanted to sit in the park after all of that...but then I got a phone call at 4:02 reminding me that I was supposed to be online for a Skype discussion on Korean teaching culture at 4pm. This is what happens when I don't write things down. It was interesting but by the time I finished I was just wanted to make dinner and veg out again.  I actually had a balanced meal: scrambled eggs, bacon, red pepper slices and OJ. Not healthy per se but I got in multiple food groups!

Spaz updates from the weekend:
1. This morning, I put my brace on the wrong ankle. I stood up, realized something was funny and looked down only to go 'doh!'
2. Tripped over my own feet while attempting to walk across the apartment (no new sprains resulted though so it's a spaz win!)
3. Accidentally whacked the Cragon in the balls while trying to smack his arm to look at the crazy socks being sold on the street.  The Partial Asian and the ajumma watching couldn't stop laughing. The Cragon was less than perfectly amused. I imagine being smacked in the crotch is not a very pleasant thing. 

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