Unpacking K-pop in America: The Subversive Potential of Male K-pop Idols’ Soft Masculinity

Authors

  • Jeehyun Jenny Lee University of Washington
  • Rachel Kar Yee Lee Korea University
  • Ji Hoon Park Korea University

Keywords:

K-pop, BTS, hegemonic masculinity, racialized masculinity

Abstract

Through an in-depth analysis of American fans of K-pop boy bands, this study explores the racial implication of the popularity of male K-pop idols whose performance of masculinity is different from hegemonic masculinity in the United States. Although American fans are appreciative of K-pop male idols and their music, our findings indicate that K-pop fans are not entirely free from the dominant perspective in the United States that relegates K-pop and K-pop male idol masculinity in the hierarchy of culture and race. In addition, the respondents’ reception of K-pop male idol’s soft masculinity as culturally and racially bounded in Korean culture and Korean men, runs the risk of essentializing the effeminate features of Asian men, and limits K-pop’s burgeoning subversive potential to challenge racialized masculinity in the United States.

Author Biographies

Jeehyun Jenny Lee, University of Washington

Ph.D. studentDepartment of CommunicationUniversity of Washington, Seattle

Rachel Kar Yee Lee, Korea University

M.A. School of Media and CommunicationKorea University

Ji Hoon Park, Korea University

ProfessorSchool of Media and CommunicationKorea University

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Published

2020-11-09

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Section

Articles