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April Fools at School

My April fools joke was not the best today, however I asked some students if they did anything in their classes and this was some answers:

A: What did you do?
S1: I told my friend, "I hate you!"
A: That's not funny. Anybody else? What did you do?
S2: We told the class president he was no longer wanted and we were taking away his position.
A: Good one! What else did you do?
S3: I'm a student
Class: erupts with laughter.
A: I don't get it?
S3: You asked me, what do I do? and I am a student.

*sigh*...Student: 1, Teacher: 0.


I only pulled one April Fools day jokes today, and that was on my co-teacher Amy. I told her that KBS wanted to interview her about me at lunch today (she is incredibly shy and nervous) and she was worried all morning about it. Then at lunch time I asked her if she knew what day it was and she after she said "Thursday" and I gave her this look like 'think harder' she died of laughter and said she'd never felt so happy. Now that I have typed this, it sounds rather lame, but it was fun for me in the morning.

Two great ones I saw on facebook were:

Mila: temper finally snapped. kicked a drunken korean man yesterday and spent the night at the police station. :( :(

Violet: Ummm... hoping my healthcare plan in Korea covers babies. Eeek!

For You, Pops

He had a heart as big as a truck and a laugh that could move a house. This was a hearty, sonic boom of a laugh, drawn from a seemingly endless well of mirth. It was released most often around the dinner table (where pops was the happiest), suddenly erupting and literally shaking the room. The man had an unstoppable joy, a playful, joking spirit that really had a life of its own. He laughed, teased, prodded and razzed, all the way until the end. So it should come as no surprise that my father was, in part, a mighty jester. After all, he was born on April 1st.

He’s been gone for over two years now, and while the material memory is beginning to fade, I’m left with these well-etched images: Bushy hair and a thick moustache that lay bare his Italian roots; huge constrictor arms, complete with tattoos: one a red heart declaring “Johnny loves Gloria” to the world, the other a busty brunette in a skimpy negligee (She used to be naked, but after the wedding, mom demanded clothes); a web of crows feet around twinkling eyes, the result of a lifetimes of laughing; a half-asleep man shuffling through the kitchen for a midnight snack, not-so-tighty-whities sagging off his butt, v-neck undershirt stretched over his boiler of a gut; a proud man spiffily dressed for family get-togethers, noble in stature and smelling of Old Spice; glasses, cup of coffee and cigarette, as he busted out a crossword at 6:30 a.m.; nodding out and snoring in the chair as the Mariners played, this early bird unable to stay awake through the 9th inning; serene at Mass, hands held out in prayer, palms-up, basking in a deeply-felt faith that I at once envied and never understood.

Pops was a gentleman, in the most basic sense of the word. He was a gentle man. He was built like a bear but never once raised his hand in anger. The closest he would come was on one of those not-infrequent occasions when my sister and I were fighting and he was trying to rest.

“That’s ENOUGH!!!!!!” he’d roar, bursting from his chair and jerking his big leather belt from the loops that held it around his waist. This alone would turn our blood to ice and terrify us into instant submission. The threat was enough, and never once was it actually carried out.

This isn’t to say that dad didn’t have a temper. He did. It didn’t arise so often, but when it did come, you and anyone else within a three-block radius knew it. I once saw him take a lifetime of aggression out against a push lawn mower that wouldn’t start. Each fruitless pull on the chord cause a wave of ire to wash over his body. Like any time he was frustrated, he bit his tongue and furrowed his brow, until the obstinance of the machine pushed him over the precipice. With the strength of an ogre, he picked up the mower and repeatedly slammed it on the ground, then chucked it the entire length of the driveway with one awesome push from his chest. This was one of the few times when I saw both the strength and the fury that my otherwise docile father was capable of.

Another time I was out with him fishing in our boat, near the town of Gig Harbor, Washington. I hooked into a MASSIVE Chinook salmon – to this day the largest fish I’ve ever had on a pole. It slammed the herring-baited hook and nearly bent the pole into the frigid Puget Sound water. I was just a kid at the time and this fish was out of my league, so dad grabbed the pole and proceeded to fight this monster, catching glimpse of its slab of a side as it rolled on the surface. The fish then proceeded to run straight out from the boat – the reel whizzing as the salmon pulled out acres of line. At this point it was about one hundred and fifty feet out. Just then we saw a giant sailboat – a yacht, really – heading our way. It was running parallel to us, right between my pole and the fish. We began to yell and wave in an effort to get the skipper’s attention, but the yacht would not deviate from its course. It pressed straight ahead. As it got closer, our shouts and gestures became more desperate, until finally the behemoth of a boat sailed right over my line, with the rudder acting as a knife. The line suddenly went slack and the fish was free.

It must be said that my dad was never much of a cusser, but the shower of profanity that geysered out of his mouth that day was nothing like I had beheld before. He bellowed f-bombs and other violent oaths with an unfettered rage. He literally shook his fist to the sky, the closest I’d ever see him challenge a God that he not only believed in, but feared and loved. He was helpless to net his son's fish because of the arrogance of some rich asshole. This inflamed my dad’s soul. He would have gladly gone to blows for me that day. This was my first lesson in class consciousness.

This is the third birthday that pops hasn’t been around for. I suppose that it has gotten a bit easier with the flow of time, but the hole in the fabric of our lives that he left still remains, and it is a tremendous one at that. I wish that his absence was an April Fool’s prank, that he could step back into this world, accompanied by his thunderous guffaw. But this is no joke. He’s gone for good and this fact gouges deep. But I’ll never forget the man, this mighty jester. In fact, if you listen carefully, you can hear him when I laugh.

General Meeting Minutes (March 2010)

General Meeting Minutes
Busan Human Rights

(General Meeting Minutes: March 27, 2010)
(17:00, Tenz, Norazo Design Academy Building)

Participants:
  • Duncan, Hyun-Ju, Jason L., Jason M., John, Jung-Ju, Maiko, Marc-Andre, Michael, Michelle, Taniya, Thomas, Tom, Will
Proceedings:
  • Meeting called to order at 17:30 by Will
  • Introductions led by Will
  • Presentation on vegetarianism led by Marc-Andre (more info www.goveg.com / www.peta.org / Video)
  • Petition letters signed for Johan Teterissa (Indonesia) (more info Korean / English / Video); Heshmatollah Tabarzadi (Iran); Obtilia Eugenio Manue (Mexico); Deogratias Mushayidi (Rwanda); Mohammad Javad Larijani (Iraq); Abed al-Hafith (Kurdistan).
  • Presentation on world hunger led by Will (more info www.wfp.org / www.freeflour.com)
  • Meeting adjourned at 20:00

Next meeting will be held on April 24, 2010 (more details to follow).

Minutes submitted by Marc-Andre P.

Please report any typos, misspelt or erroneous information as well as omissions to Marc-Andre P. (marcandrepaquin (at) gmail (dot) com)

Mushroom, mushroom!





I was lucky enough to find wild mushrooms on sale at the local market (1,500 won for a basket), so I've been cooking with them the last couple of days.


(Mushroom! Mushroom!)





On the left, you can see them sauteed in olive oil (perfect for tasting the wild flavour of the 'shrooms) and on the right, made into a spread. By the way, try finding a glass of wine that full in any restaurant in Korea. No matter how cheap the Jinro served....

Spread recipe
Ingredients:

300g mushrooms (roughly chopped)

a dozen black olives (pits removed)

1 salad tomato, diced

a taplespoonful of onion, diced

a splash of red wine vinegar

olive oil


Sauté half the mushrooms in olive oil, and put aside. Be careful not to overcook them. Put aside. Sauté the other half of the mushrooms together with the olives, in olive oil and red wine vinegar. they are ready once the mushrooms take some of the wine's colour (be careful not to add too much vinegar.

Mix both sets of mushrooms, along with the uncooked tomato and onion, together in a dip bowl. Serve on crusty bread. Enjoy.




Poll results for March 2010

Private lessons: where do you fit in? (anonymous voting)

(NOTE: Respondents could choose more than one answer)

I teach privates legitimately (F-class or with employers permission)
11 (7%)
I teach privates... um, not-so-legitimately (E-class visa or without permission)
17 (11%)
I make more money teaching privates than at my 'regular' job
9 (6%)
I make almost as much teaching privates
10 (6%)
I'm teaching privates and enjoying the extra cash
14 (9%)
I taught private lessons in the past, but not anymore
33 (22%)
I haven't taught privates yet - but I'd like to
36 (24%)
I've never taught a private lesson while in Korea, and don't plan to
44 (29%)

The results aren't exactly surprising - even on an anonymous survey the numbers seem a bit 'proper', as if some people are giving the proper answer instead of the actual answer... In any case, about 11% admit to teaching 'illegal' lessons, while the second largest number indicates an interest in teaching privates - interesting.

Next question for April 2010: How many hours a week do you actually teach? (Don't include prep, meetings, etc.)

Not a scientific poll, based solely on responders interested in responding to an anonymous poll, open from 1 March 2010 to 31 March 2010, yadda yadda yadda.

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.

 

The Last of the Snow

One dilemma we often face here at Lee's Korea Blog is the issue of deciding what constitutes reasonable blogging material and what most probably doesn't. The root cause of this we prefer to blame on a grad student life devoid of regularly-spaced exciting events. Once in a while, we receive a 'boring' vote in the feedback section, which is heavily scrutinized by our various entities. This is then followed by a period of deep and thoughtful soul searching. Does our formless audience wash up on the cybershores of LKB seeking witty charm and social commentary? Or are they merely satisfied to be spoon fed the detailed minutae that constitutes a generally lacklustre existence?

IMG_1945
The answers to these questions, I know not. But last week we had some snow on campus and so I took a photo.

Yes, I think it looks pretty too.

IMG_2001
Down in the fields of Suwon, the ajossis seem to be up to all kinds of mischief. By the time I arrived on Wednesday last week, they had managed to haul up three tractors onto the roof of our abandoned building with a crane. And there they were, jackhammering away like it was nobody's business.

Now I don't know much about demolition in general, but I do know that a wrecking ball would be more in line with the real traditions of the Korean ajossi.

IMG_2004
This little fellow reminded me of the probe droid on the ice planet Hoth at the beginning of the Empire Strikes Back. But this distant ancestor lacks autonomous control, encrypted communications and a self-destruct mechanism, amongst other things.

IMG_1976
During the cold winter months, one of our favourite comfort foods is shabu-shabu. It's basically a hot pot, or steamboat, bubbling away in the centre of the table to which you add various uncooked condiments like thinly sliced beef. Apparently it was an idea brought here by the Mongols long ago as a way to make meat supplies last longer.

IMG_1962
One thing I'm getting used to around the house is finding various consumables stored at the half-consumed stage. Call me old fashioned, but when I open a can of beer I usually have the intention of drinking it all. Heather is a little different. She'll put cling wrap on a can of beer and save it for later. There's also the famous 'half a processed cheese slice in the fridge' and my favourite, the 'half a packet of ramyeon' complete with half-used seasoning powder.

IMG_1963
And here is the perpetrator herself. I'd be inclined to grumble at her if she wasn't always being cute and cheeky at the same time. Her arms are also getting pretty muscular these days.

She's been going to the gym.

IMG_1964
This is a photo of me, evidently staring at something of interest. Now who would be so cheeky as to take a photo of me with my own camera, without my knowledge? I'll give you a clue. Her name starts with an 'H' and rhymes with 'feather'.

IMG_1961
That cartoon on the building is about 15 storeys high. It's a new art installation down at Seoul Station and is made of thousands of LEDs. The whole display is animated and shows outlines of people walking at different speeds. I quite like it myself.

One thing that Seoul could do with is a bit more eye candy like this around the place.

Anyway, see you soon.

April 2010 events

Author's note: this page will be updated as I get information or clarification on new events - check back often!

Happening sometime in April (more information to come, possibly)
Seoul Open Art Fair 2010 - although I haven't yet received any information about this year's event, last year's event featured 1,200 artists, 80 galleries, and over 5,500 pieces of art. Last year it was held at the Indian Hall at COEX, but we'll see where it is this year.

April 1 - April 11: The Jinhae Cherry Blossom Festival (AKA the Jinhae Guhang Festival) - the annual cherry blossom festival that's been running since 1963 comes around yet again. The entire town gets involved, and walking down the streets and up the mountains are just two of the ways to see the sights. If interested in traveling with a group on April 3rd-4th, check out the Seoulite Meetup group. 55,000 won pays for your chartered bus ride down and a night's hotel stay. For more information about the trip, contact bredalund AT gmail DOT com. For more information about the festival, check out one official tourist webpage.

April 1: Pan - the Korean traditional music form opens an open run at Gwanghwamun Art Hall (Gyeongbokgung station, line 3, exit 1). While it looks to be more for the tourists, it's a great chance to learn about Korean traditional song, dance, and music. 8pm every weekday, 2pm every weekend and holiday. More information at 02-722-3416 or http://www.ghmarthall.co.kr (Korean only); tickets available through Auction at 1566-1369.

April 2-3: Tom Jones. CANCELLED - see the official website for details about his voice problems.

April 2 - May 9: World Photonics Expo - Gwangju. Brian in Jeollanam-do talked about the preparations, and the official website is over here. While commercializing light and learning about what lets you see doesn't sound like the most interesting thing in the world, it's a good excuse to take the train and get out of Seoul.

April 3 - A special Seoul City Improv fund-raising show. Five of their members are headed to Taiwan for a performance with Taichung Improv later this month - and plane tickets cost money. Roofers in Itaewon (across from the Foreign Food Mart and What The Book), show starts at 8pm but arrive early, 10,000 won gets you in and one free drink. More information: check out their Facebook page.

April 6, 8pm: The Secret Garden - no, not the boys from the 90's - the Irish-Norwegian duo playing Neo-Classical Music. They're famous. See their home page for more about the music, or head over to the Nowon Cultural and Art Center for more details (Korean only).

April 6-18: The Yeouido Cherry Blossom Festival - in case getting all the way down to Jinhae isn't the cards, the National Assembly in Seoul will be having a sizable festival as well. National Assembly station (line 9) or Yeouinaru station (line 5) are closest to the fun. When in doubt, follow the crowd. Check visitseoul.net for more information.

April 7, 8pm: Glen Hansard and Marketa Irglova, also known as the two singers/songwriters in the movie Once, return to Seoul. Entitled 'The Swell Season', the new project keeps the duo together despite their personal relationship going south. Check out ticket.interpark.com for more, or call them at 1544-1555.

April 9-10: Jesus Christ Superstar - the religious theatre epic comes to Nowon in northern Seoul. 7:30pm on the 9th, 3pm and 6pm on the 10th. See nowonart.kr (Korean only) or call 02-951-3355. They don't seem to see many foreigners up there...

April 9-10: An evening of three solo musical performances by some well known acts around Seoul. Check out Jennifer Waescher, Tim Mcmanus, and Ida Grandas for a chill evening of great music and excellent vibes. Tim Mcmanus can be found at www.myspace.com/tcmcmanus, Ida Grandas at http://imbuildingacity.wordpress.com or
www.myspace.com/idagrandas and Jennifer Waescher at www.myspace.com/jenniferwaeschermusic.For more information, call 010-2363-3720, go to the Soul Underground Website at www.soulunderground.co.kr
or check out the Facebook page.

April 10: Jamie Cullum comes to town! The British jazz singer-songwriter makes an appearance in Seoul's AX-Hall (Gwangnaru Station, line 5, exit 2). If you've never heard of Jamie Cullum, imagine a younger Frank Sinatra that also discovered how to sing / write pop. For tickets, call Private Curve at (02) 563-0595 or e-mail [email protected].

April 15: The Shorts Show DEADLINE, sponsored by www.rootexperience.com. The Shorts Show is a night designed to provide an opportunity for individuals or groups to showcase or try out new work. Each short performance must last a maximum of 20 minutes. The idea is just to give it a go in front of an enthusiastic audience. This date isn't for the show though.

If you would like to do a performance, please email [email protected], before 15th April, with your name, contact number, name of performance: (just a working title would be fine), number of people involved (it doesn’t matter if you don’t know for certain yet, just an estimate), and your idea: (explain in no more than 200 words what you would like to do with your 20 minutes).

April 16 (8pm) Julio Iglesias - with a 42 year singing career and a website in over a dozen languages, he comes to Seoul as part of his "Starry Nights World Tour". Save your won for this one - 88,000 - 250,000 won per seat. No, you don't get to take the seat with you when you go home. Sejong Center for the Performing Arts, Gwanghwamun station in downtown Seoul. For more information, visit http://www.sejongpac.or.kr/english/ or call 02-538-8181

April 16 - 17: Seoul Players 24-hour theater project. If interested in starring in or writing a 5-7 minute play, come out to Roofers in Itaewon at 9pm. People will be randomly assigned to teams, and the teams will pick items from 'inspiration buckets' - things like a first line, a setting, a prop, a genre, an action, a character quirk, etc. The writer is left to write the play overnight, and rehearsal begins the next morning. The show is at 9pm on April 17th at Roofers as well. 10,000 won, no reservatations required or available. For more information, e-mail [email protected] or check out their Facebook page for the event.

April 17 - 22: The 13th Traditional Drinks and Rice Cake Festival. Head down to Hwangseong Park in Gyeongju to sample, shop, or just feel like a tourist. There's tons to see in the area. More information about last year's festival is over at Gyeongju's official website.

April 17: Boyz II Men and the creatively-named 4MEN group perform at the Fencing Arena of Olympic Park. Tickets are 77,000 - 143,000 apiece, and are available through yes24.com or calling 02)516-1718. For more information, check out the always-excellent korea4expats.com.

April 22 - May 16 - 'Stones in his Pockets' - the hit comedy play about two men in rural Ireland by Marie Jones comes to Korea after a Broadway run. It'll come to Busan in May, so check back in May for more information about that. Weekdays at 8:30pm, weekends at 4:30pm and 8:30pm. Vin Vino in Itaewon (formerly Kabinett), with dinner specials available (visit vinvino.co.kr for more). Otherwise, e-mail [email protected] for reservations or call 016-695-4624 for information.

April 23 - May 9 - Goyang Flower Show. Time to marvel at the flowers, and I'm not just talking about the cherry blossoms here. Held once every three years near Lake Park, it's definitely worth checking out if you like flowers at all. See the official website for more information.

April 24 - A foreigners flea market, sponsored by the Seoul Global Center. Want to sell something? You have until the 21st to get your application in. Check out this Seoul City Blog post or http://global.seoul.go.kr for the most up-to-the-minute data.

April 24 (4pm) - A reading of 'Twelfth Night' by Shakespeare - done in a bar. Actors Without Barders is putting it on at Roofers in Itaewon. Best of all, the roof is open to the public for one of the best views of Itaewon. For more information, e-mail actorswb AT yahoo.com.

April 25 - The Vagina Monologues come to Busan. You either know it, you've heard about it, or you have no idea what a vagina really is. Monk Live Jazz Club near Kyungsung University (Kyungsung University, line 2, exit 1). Free admission, although donations will go to shelters that help victims of sex trafficking in Korea. Hat tip to the Grand Narrative for putting up a good map of the location. More information on Facebook or Meetup - take your pick.

April 29 - May 2 - Seoul International Photo and Imaging Show - your chance to get your hands on the newest cameras and lenses without a salesperson standing right over you. If you're a camera or pictures geek, this is the 'can't-miss' event of the month. COEX mall, 10am - 6pm (last day, to 4pm) - 5,000 won admission, or free if you pre-register here (use IE, not Firefox).

April 29 - May 2 - Korea International Jewelry and Watch Fair - most of it will be out of your price range, but still lots of fun to gawk at. Wear nice clothes and you might be treated like a buyer instead of an English teacher. Expect 200 exhibitors from 14 countries showing off all forms of jewelry, from fashionable to functional. COEX mall, no word on admission fee, but expect to pay something.

April 29 - May 3 - Seoul Tango Festival - plenty of tango dancing to watch and learn from. Learn more about the event at www.seoultangofestival.com.

April 29 - May 7 - Jeonju International Film Festival (전주국제영화제) - one of the best Korean film festivals worth seeing. Not far from Seoul, here's the link in English

(DEADLINE) April 30: Deadline for a group going to the Boryeong Mud Festival. The trip isn't until July, but it'll fill up quick. 55,000 won gets you a round-trip ticket on a charter bus and a spot in a pension that's being taken over by the group. For more details, check out the Facebook page or e-mail bredalund AT gmail.com.

May 1 (7:30pm): Camarata Music Company's second major performance - Duruflé's Requiem, Fauré's Requiem, along with Rheinberger's "Stabat Mater" - plenty of classical music performed by a choir of both expats and Koreans. Check out the event's Facebook page or go to camaratamusic.com for more. Changshin University, near Walker Hill, 20,000 won admission.



Creative Commons License © Chris Backe - 2010

Chris in South Korea does not receive any money or special favors for mentioning any of the above events.

Sex as Power in the South Korean Military

( Source: anja_johnson )

“All men are rapists”, I read on the back cover of Susan Brownmiller’s Against Our Will: Men, Women, and Rape (1975) as a student, and determined to impress girls with my intellectual and feminist prowess by debunking that quote, I bought the book and doggedly read all 480 pages trying to find it. Twice.

Yes, I was rather naive about the whole dating game, and you can imagine how I felt when I learned years later that she never actually said that: rather, it was a big misinterpretation of her statement that rape “is nothing more or less than a conscious process of intimidation, by which all men keep all women in a state of fear” (p. 5), albeit an understandable one. Indeed, it’s probably what she’s became best known for, an enduring catch-phrase of pop-feminism that publishers would knowingly exploit to sell the book to me 2 decades later.

Which is a shame, because along with Menachem Amir, she was instrumental in overturning long-held conventions that rape was simply a spontaneous act of lust, instead demonstrating that it is more “a deliberate, hostile, violent act of degradation and possession on the part of a would-be conqueror, designed to intimidate and inspire fear…” (p. 439). Or in short, it’s due to her that surely all reading this are aware that sexual violence is all about power, and not surprised to hear this reaffirmed by the survey “Sexual Violence Among Men in the Military in South Korea” by Insook Kwon et. al., Journal of Interpersonal Violence, Vol. 22, No. 8, 1024-1042 (2007), the subject of today’s post.

The first comprehensive survey of its kind, in English or Korean, it was prompted by the suicide of a Korean soldier in July 2003, which received tremendous attention in the media because sexual violence by his superiors seemed to have played a role; after all, with 250,000 men forcibly conscripted each year, any implication that it wasn’t an isolated incident meant that there were far more victims. And in point of fact, with the proviso that the authors’ (undefined) notion of “sexual violence” appears to be much broader than a layperson’s as I’ll explain, they did find that 15.8% of respondents experienced it during their time in the military, either as perpetrators or victims. Before discussing the implications of that however, and especially what it says about the role of the military in the socialization of Korean men, let first provide an overview of the survey so you can make your minds (with a nod to copyright, I won’t upload the survey itself here sorry, but please feel free to email me if you’d like your own copy). And so, without any further ado:

The survey was conducted from November 2003 to February 2004, with researchers meeting 2 groups: 362 postconscripts, then students, at 6 different colleges; and 409 current conscripts, 115 at bus and train stations while they were on leave, and 294 in visits to their barracks with the official cooperation of the Ministry of Defense. From each group, there were 266, 111, and 294 valid samples respectively, giving a total of 671 valid samples out of 771 soldiers surveyed (the bulk excluded being postconscripts, and because more than 3 years had passed since their military service). They also conducted in-depth interviews of 8 perpetrators in army prison, and 3 victims.

Highlights of the results include (all emphases mine):

Of 671 valid respondents who participated in this survey of victimization, perpetration, and observation, a total of 103 people (15.4%) answered that they were directly victimized, 48 people (7.2%) answered that they had direct experience as perpetrators, and 166 people (24.7%) answered that they witnessed sexual violence in the military.

Excluding eyewitnesses, a total of 106 soldiers (15.8%) directly experienced physical sexual violence, either as perpetrators or victims in the military. A very high number of soldiers also indicated they experienced sexual violence as perpetrators and as victims: 59 soldiers (55.7%) were victims only, 39 soldiers (36.8%) were victims and perpetrators, and only 8 soldiers (7.5%) were exclusively perpetrators. Among perpetrators, 83% had experienced sexual violence in the military when they had been lower ranked soldiers. This feature of high number of perpetrators having previously experienced victimization themselves could be seen as the most unique feature of sexual violence among men in the military. (p. 1028)

( Source: anja_johnson )

And:

Victims named higher ranking soldiers (71.1%), junior officers (7%), and officers (3.1%) as their perpetrators, totaling 81.2% of victims who responded that someone of a higher rank forcibly imposed sexual contact….

Also, the eight perpetrators and three victims who agreed to be interviewed, as well as six cases recorded by the Korean Sexual Violence Relief Center and reports by military judiciary officers, confirmed that victims of sexual abuse were in lower ranks than their perpetrators. All victims had been victimized by higher ranking soldiers, and eyewitnesses reported likewise. In sum, sexual violence among men in the military in South Korea was committed primarily by a higher ranking solider against a lower ranking soldier. (p. 1029)

The types of abuse, as reported by victims and witnesses (p. 1031; multiple answers permitted):

As reported by the perpetrators (p. 1033):

Also note that 22.1% of victims (but only 7% of perpetrators) reported that physical violence accompanied the sexual violence, and that 71.8% of victims and 90.7% of perpetrators responded that the acts of sexual violence when others were watching (I’ll return to the latter point shortly).  And in particular, eyewitnesses reported that 22.5% of the sexual violence they saw involved touching genitals, and 5.1% involving anal penetration (or the attempt), nearly 2 and 5 times higher than victims reported respectively.

Reflecting on the discrepancies, Kwon et al. found that:

…people tended to feel more comfortable talking about what might be considered part of a general sexual culture—such as kissing, hugging, and telling sexually explicit jokes—but answers were less forthcoming when concerning sexual violence of a more serious degree. (p. 1032)

Which for a long time I simply didn’t understand: how on Earth was that the “general sexual culture” of the military? Well, first consider that:

When asked, “In the military, have you ever been forced to talk about sexual experiences, even when you did not want to?” almost one third (32.7%) of the 667 respondents answered affirmatively. To the question, “Have you ever experienced negative consequences either because you did not have any sexual experiences or because you refused to discuss your sexual experiences?” a total of 218 soldiers (32.7%) answered that they had been forced to talk about sexual experience. (p. 1028)

And that this mandatory disclosure of sexual experience has long been regarded as “an essential part of sexual culture in the military” is corroborated by numerous references in Korean movies to the practice of virgins visiting a prostitute before starting one’s military service, of which I highly recommend the satirical comedy The First Amendment of Korea below.

( Source )

Next, there is the fact that victims of sexual violence tended to interpret it as:

…intimacy or playfulness, because identification as a victim of sexual violence would imply one’s fragility and vulnerability. This tendency to minimize and trivialize injury was clear in cases where abuse continued for a long time, and in situations where a clear power dynamic between the perpetrator and the victim made resistance much more difficult for the victim. (p. 1033)

Moreover, perpetrators:

…did not force sexual contact on their peers with whom they had even closer relationships [than inferiors]. The intimacy in question was strictly an intimacy from the position of the higher ranking soldier.

Kwon et al. further discuss the natural difficulties victims had in refusing advances by a superior, and crucially, why the third most common form of sexual violence was touching a victim’s genitals. But why, particularly when only 5.4% of victims thought that their perpetrators were genuinely homosexual? Well, as one victim noted:

…unlike in the general society where one could not treat another person with complete disregard for age, educational level, or class, in the military, higher ranking soldiers could treat lower ranking soldiers as one pleased—including touching their genitals. (p. 1035)

And after a discussion of the right to control and abuse the body being a very useful method for militaries to reaffirm its hierarchical order, and of the role of the penis as a symbol of power and authority throughout history, they note that, hence:

…teasing or forceful contact with one’s penis becomes a way to prove the victim’s lack of power.

( Source: Journey to Perplexity )

Needless to say, the effects of this are amplified if done in public settings, and indeed 90.7% of perpetrators responded that people were watching when their sexual violence occurred, with the vast majority of witnesses either actively engaging in it in some way (23.7%), passively consenting by simply watching (57.9%), or pretending not to see (10.5%) rather than attempting to stop it: hence a “general sexual culture.”

But continuing with why:

…violence feminizes victims of sexual violence in two ways. The victim is reduced to a sexual object, like many women typically face in society, and as the powerless victim of violence, he is further feminized. Men who are victimized by sexual violence, then, become someone whose masculinity is lacking or damaged. Hierarchical order reasserts itself amid all this, and men collectively try to be on the offensive to affirm their aggressive masculinity. (pp. 1035-36)

And finally, the testimony of a perpetrator himself on why he did it, who said that he used sexual violence in lieu of physical violence sometimes, forcing sexual contact by “not hitting every time, and not joking around but harassing them”:

[Like harassing them…] Yes, I can’t hit them every time . . . and it’s not just joking around, but harassing them. . . . For instance, making them clean things repeatedly. Stuff like that. . . . If they were from wealthy families . . . or had a lot of education themselves . . . the superiors are ahead only because they came to the military before them . . . honestly . . . when you don’t have much to show for, and if they kiss ass to superiors who intimidate them . . . and if they think you’re not all that . . . well, you can’t beat them and so I kept thinking about ways to give them hell in the military, legal ways . . . and that’s how I ended up. (pp. 1036-37)

( {2-365} Tick Tock by Dee’lite )

But what to make of all this?

At this point, it seems appropriate to point out my own complete lack of experience with the Korean military, as well as not even having any close relationships with any Korean men from whom I could learn about their military service, and so I would be very grateful to hear from those that have either. But then my own inexperience is essentially irrelevant here, as I’m largely passing on the results of renowned experts in the field (scroll down to note #32 here for more information on Kwon for instance); moreover, my own interest in on what is implied for Korean culture and sexuality as a whole, and so let me pass on the following description of military life provided by Ask a Korean, in his own excellent series on military service in Korea:

For some of today’s Korean young men, who have gone soft since the days of their fathers, military experience can be unbearable. Physical exercise is grueling, the superiors can be arbitrary and insulting, and your squad mates could shun you if you are responsible for putting the whole squad in trouble. Given that these guys, just like any other soldiers in Korea, can access guns and grenades, it should be no surprise that recently there has been a string of incidents in which a draftee shoots up his squad or toss a grenade in the squad room, killing many….

….[But there are definitely good life lessons to be learned from the experience, although it may be debatable whether learning those lessons is a good use of 2 to 3 years of young men in their prime. To put it bluntly, the military experience builds Korean men’s tolerance for all the life’s bullshit. As the Korean described so far, there is no shortage of bullshit – some of them perhaps the worst to be encountered in life – in the military. Exhausting physical training, insults and condescension from the superiors, and wasting time on arbitrary and trivial errands are all part of the experience. For young Korean men in the military, there is no choice but to simply grin and bear them. Once they finish bearing it, they know that most difficulties in life would be easier than what they already went through. The combination of such tolerance and insight, some may call it maturity – because, as anyone who has had a regular job can tell you, life as an adult has a lot of crap that we must simply grin and bear.

( Band of Brothers by The U.S. Army Photostream )

And in the next post in that series (my emphasis):

…one can argue that the military culture neatly coincides with traditional Korean culture – in both cultures, seniority automatically commands respect and loyalty. It is not surprising, then, that Korean workplaces are often run just like a squad in the military. You do what your boss tells you to do, and you are supposed to grin and bear it. Your time will come because Korea, like Japan, had automatic advancement by seniority at least until 1990s. Once you are the boss, you can order people around, much like the way you can order people around once you put in the time and became a sergeant.

I happened to work in such a place when I wrote the first post in my own series on gender and militarization in South Korea, and in which I noted that Korean corporate life often requires such a level of personal sacrifice for one’s superiors that, tellingly, even the Samsung Economic Research Institute acknowledges that “many workers…take it for granted that they have to tolerate anything in return for getting paid.” I should note however, that many readers thought my workplace was the exception rather than the rule, but be that as it may, the purpose of many of those things to be tolerated there boiled down to no more than the demonstration (and abuse) of superiors’ authority…and so too does sexual violence clearly emerge as one means – albeit, and I stress, only one, uncommon means – of doing so in the Korean military.

But I will further cover the effects on Korean gender relations and sexuality in great detail as I belatedly continue that series next month. In the meantime, let me leave you with the following passage from Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors: A Search For Who We Are (1993) by Carl Sagan and Ann Druyan to ponder, a book which had a great effect on my worldview and which frequently came to mind as I was writing this post (via Viraj’s Weblog):

( Source )

We go to great lengths to deny our animal heritage, and not just in scientific and philosophical discourse. You can glimpse the denial in the shaving of men’s faces; in clothing and other adornments; in the great lengths gone to in the preparation of meat to disguise the fact that an animal is being killed, flayed, and eaten. The common primate practice of pseudosexual mounting of males by males to express dominance is not widespread in humans, and some have taken comfort from this fact. But the most potent form of verbal abuse in English and many other languages is “Fuck you,” with the pronoun “I” implicit at the beginning. The speaker is vividly asserting his claim to higher status, and his contempt for those he considers subordinate. Characteristically, humans have converted a postural image into a linguistic one with barely a change in nuance. The phrase is uttered millions of times each day, all over the planet, with hardly anyone stopping to think what it means. Often, it escapes our lips unbidden. It is satisfying to say. It serves its purpose. It is a badge of the primate order, revealing something of our nature despite all our denials and pretensions.

Personal author, compiler, or editor name(s); click on any author to run a new search on that name. Kwon, InsookLee, Dong-OkKim, ElliKim, Hyun-Young


Filed under: Gender Socialization, Korean Sexuality, Prostitution, Rape, Sexual Abuse, Sexual Harassment
  

 

Korean Brands: Making it in New York

The summer before I moved to Korea (back in 2008), my mom discovered Eryn Brinie, a Korean designer who got a paragraph mention in Lucky Magazine when her new store opened in New York. We got excited, as silly as it seemed, that a Korean brand was in New York. Aside from the Korea Town barbecue places and their section in the local Asian markets, we didn't know of anything else 'Korean' that was available in New York.

Ever since I started heading to the ubiquitous chicken hofs for wings and beer, I've said they need to have hofs in the US. There is nothing quite like a restaurant that serves nothing but different varieties of fried chicken, beer and soju. So imagine how I felt reading this in the Korea Times today:
The popular Korean wing franchise [Kyochon], which opened its modern $2-million, two-story space, already has several restaurants in New York and California. But the latest addition is located right smack in the center of Manhattan, a positioning aimed at targeting more American customers.
 Apparently, Korean CEOs are shifting their marketing strategy from targeting Korea Town areas to more diverse setting. Truthfully, starting that plan in places like New York and Los Angeles is a smart move. Foreign is chic and/or trendy when going out to dinner there. Granted, a chicken hof is never going to be chic but it certainly has novelty appeal.

I hope Skin Food** branches from their face masks in the US (and selling only at Walmart, where I refuse to shop). I've become addicted to their ridiculous (and cheap) nail polish colors. Currently my nails are a lovely bright purple. Hey, I'm an elementary school teacher. Bright colors are not only allowed, my students love them.  Or are seriously amused and either way it gets them to speak to me about something in English so I don't really care what their reason for doing it is. One of my favorite things about Korea is how many cheap makeup brands are available. In the states, cheap makeup tends to only be available in drug stores where there aren't tester bottles open so you can check colors, texture, etc. Cheap isn't cheap if you hate the color when you take it home and never use it.

The Korea Times also quoted a consultant about trying to make sure Korea doesn't brand itself as cheap and appealing to more upmarket clients/products. I think that capitalizing on how zany and funky Korea can be would be fabulous for its commercial image.

I will admit, I'm highly amused that this is the opening line from the KT article:  "Every time Tina Shin digs into a plate full of spicy, double-fried chicken wings from Kyochon, she craves some chilled Cass, a Korean beer. But she can't readily order it off the menu." I love Korean food and alcohol but cheap Korean beer is even worse than cheap American beer. The oh so creative expat nickname for Cass is 'Ass.' To each their own I suppose. 



**Skin food actually has a decent English language website for women in Korea who want more details on their products than the limited English on the packaging gives.
***Shouldn't I be busy like I said I would be instead of updating my blog? Theoretically, yes. Only, I'm working on my taxes and I have a question only my Dad can answer so now I have to wait until it's a reasonable hour in New York to continue being productive. ~pokes the blogosphere for wonderful time killing entertainment~

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