Understanding Korean Film: A Cross-Cultural Perspective

Author:   Jieun Kiaer ,  Loli Kim
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9780367546205


Pages:   248
Publication Date:   30 November 2021
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Understanding Korean Film: A Cross-Cultural Perspective


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Author:   Jieun Kiaer ,  Loli Kim
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Weight:   0.600kg
ISBN:  

9780367546205


ISBN 10:   0367546205
Pages:   248
Publication Date:   30 November 2021
Audience:   College/higher education ,  General/trade ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

"Table of Contents LIST OF FIGURES LIST OF TABLES ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS PRELIMINARIES 1. INTRODUCTION 1.1 THE GLOBAL AGE OF KOREAN FILM 1.2. THE ONE-INCH BARRIER 1.3. FILM VIEWERS SEEK VISIBILITY 1.4. THE IMPORTANCE OF UNDERSTANDING KOREAN INTERACTIONS 1.5. WHAT YOU WILL FIND IN THIS BOOK 2. THEORETICAL BACKGROUND 2.1. CALLS FOR VISIBILITY 2.1.1. Calls for Visibility in National Film Studies 2.1.2. Current K-Film Literature 2.1.3. Defining Foreign 2.1.4. Invisibility in Translation and Foreignisation 2.1.5. Cultural Translation 2.1.6. The Implications of (In)visibles 2.1.7. Cultural Appropriation and The Problems with Anglicisation 2.2. KOREAN COMMUNICATION: A BIRD’S EYE VIEW 2.2.1. Interactional Dynamics: A Socio-Pragmatically Rich Language 2.2.2. Distance matters: Respect vs. Intimacy 2.2.3. Speech Styles 2.2.4. Negotiating Respect and Intimacy: How to Modulate Expressions 2.2.5. The Importance of Non-Verbal Communication 2.2.6. How This Culminates in Multimodal Invisibility in K-Film 2.2.7. Summary: Socio-Pragmatic Invisibles in K-film Translation 3. THE KOREAN CULTURAL CONTEXT 3.1. FIVE RELATIONS: THE FUNDAMENT OF NEO-CONFUCIANISM 3.1.1. Parents and children 3.1.2. King and subjects 3.1.3. Husband and Wife 3.1.4. Age 3.1.5. Siblings 3.1.6. Womanhood 3.2. CONTEMPORARY CONFUCIAN CONTEXT 3.2.1. Oryun in Contemporary Korea 3.3. ADDITIONAL CONCEPTS TO FAMILIARISE YOURSELF WITH 3.3.1. Han (한) 3.3.2. Jeong (정) 3.3.3. Ansim (안심) 3.3.4. Nunchi (눈치) 3.3.5. Chemyeon (체면) 4. SOCIO-PRAGMATIC STRATEGIES IN K-FILM 4.1. HOW TO ADDRESS PEOPLE: ADDRESS TERMS AND SECOND PERSON PRONOUNS 4.2. NON-VERBAL HONORIFICS 4.3. MULTIMODAL MODULATION HYPOTHESIS 4.4. HOW DO WE DEFINE A ‘SOCIO-PRAGMATIC PRIMITIVE’? 4.4.1. Social Factors 4.4.2. Classifying the Politeness of Expressions 4.5. SOCIO-PRAGMATIC PRIMITIVES IN MORE CONCRETE TERMS 4.5.1. Abbreviations and logical operators 4.5.2. Reading conditional and defeasible logic 4.6. A SOCIO-PRAGMATIC TOOLBOX FOR INTERPRETING K-FILM 4.6.1. Non-Verbal Socio-Pragmatic Primitives 4.6.2. Verbal Socio-Pragmatic Primitives 4.6.3. Summary: Using socio-pragmatic primitives for film analysis and casual film viewing 5. CASE STUDIES 5.1. SADO 5.1.1. Context 5.1.2. Case Study 1: How to Irritate Your Neo-Confucian Father 5.1.3. Case Study 2: The Girl Doesn’t Know Her Place 5.2. GISAENGCHUNG 5.2.1. Context 5.2.2. Case Study 3: Why Did Mr. Kim Kill Mr. Park? 5.3. 82 NYEONSAENG KIM JI-YOUNG 5.3.1. Context 5.3.2. Case Study 4: What Happened to Ji-young at Chuseok? 5.4. TAEKSI UNJEONSA 5.4.1. Context 5.4.2. Case Study 5: He isn’t just having a hard time, he’s lost all hope. 5.4.3. Case Study 6: They’re good friends, it’s not just humorous 5.4.4. Case Study 7: He’s not just saying sorry, he genuinely feels guilty 5.4.5. Case Study 8: Skinship and the development of Sa-bok and Jürgen’s bond 5.5. CHINGU 5.5.1. Case Study 9: ""You Wanna Die?"" 5.5.2. Case Study 10: Frenemies 5.6. JOPOK MANURA 5.6.1. Case Study 11: Who does Eun-jin respect? 5.6.2. Case Study 12: How ‘Not’ to Meet Your Korean In-Laws 5.6.3. Case Study 13: 101 on Being a Woman: Uhhh Oppa! 5.6.4. Case Study 14: From Gangster to Wife 5.7. HANYEO 5.7.1. Case Study 15: He’s Losing His Temper 5.7.2. Case Study 16: Don’t Call Me Crazy! 5.7.3. Case Study 17: The Gohs’ Insincerity 5.7.4. Case Study 18: The Housekeeper's Apology 5.8. AI KAEN SEUPIKEU 5.8.1. Case Study 19: Stimulating Empathy, Korean Style! 5.8.2. Case Study 20: Creating Poignancy in Language Use 5.8.3. Case Study 21: Defining Bad 5.8.4. Case Study 22: Chief Park? Forget it, I’ll call you Min-Jae! 6. CONCLUSION 6.1. BEYOND THE SUBTITLE 6.2. THE TERMS FOR UNDERSTANDING K-FILM 6.3. FILM RESEARCHERS AS TRANSLATORS 6.4. THE FUTURE OF THIS RESEARCH BASIC MULTIMODAL GLOSSARY FOR K-FILM VIEWING APPENDIX REFERENCES FILMOGRAPHY INDEX"

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Author Information

Jieun Kiaer is professor of Korean Language and Linguistics at the University of Oxford. She publishes widely on East Asian translation, with particular emphasis on Korean translation. Her publications include The Routledge Course in Korean Translation (2018) and Korean Literature through the Korean Wave (with Anna Yates-Lu, 2019). Kiaer is also the series editor for Routledge Studies in East Asian Translation. Loli Kim is a DPhil researcher in Korean Studies at the University of Oxford. Her work explores multimodal, semantic, and cross-cultural communication, particularly from a Korean perspective. Her current research focuses on the translation of multimodal meaning-making processes in South Korean film that become ‘untranslatable’ for Anglophone European viewers, with special focus on socio-pragmatic verbal and non-verbal behavioural expressions.

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