Minggu, 31 Oktober 2010

A plea to Korean American parents for Halloween:  Please do not dress your children in traditional Korean garb for Halloween. Not to say all Korean American parents do this, but the Korean has definitely met enough young Korean Americans who had been traumatized by this experience.

Korean traditional dress is not some costume that you dust off for a day marked with the strange and the outlandish. It does not belong next to Spider-Man and fairies. It is for important, joyous occasions like Lunar New Year, Chuseok, weddings and birthdays. The Korean understands the sentiment, but please stop it. Instead of relegating it to a dumb holiday with silly dresses, have your children wear it seriously and proudly in more meaningful times.

Jumat, 29 Oktober 2010

Ask a Korean! Wiki: What is the Best City for Asian Americans?

Dear Korean,

Now that I have some financial freedom to move relatively wherever I want, where is the best place for Asian Americans to live? New York City has been my home for 30 years and I have never liked the attitude towards Asians here.

Sam


Dear Sam,

Very interesting question. The Korean's personal pick would be a tie between San Francisco and Los Angeles. Both cities are heavily Asian, which means no more dumb statements like "Your English is so good!" or "No, where are you really from?" It also means that Asian Americans run major businesses, which means less potential discrimination (intentional or otherwise) in the course of your job. Both cities have very good and real Asian food, although San Francisco leans more Chinese and Los Angeles more Korean/Vietnamese. But they do have slight differences, which ends up being a matter of preference. (It should be obvious that this is all generalization and individual experience may differ.)


San Francisco is where Asian Americans can go in America to feel "normal". The Asian American population there is so old that it is essentially mainstream. Even 80-year-old Asian American grandmothers speak perfect English. Even the white people in San Francisco have gotten so used to Asians that it does not even really register that Asians are supposed to be different somehow. No one has to apologize for the fact that the lunch that he packed for the office smells like Asian food, for example. In San Francisco, an Asian American can live while being oblivious to the fact that she is a minority.



Los Angeles is where Asian Americans can go in America to feel "special". Angelenos want to be hip, and being Asian in 2010 is hip. It is sometimes annoying that people constantly remind your Asian-ness, but that attention is generally positive -- it feels nice that people are curious about your culture and want to learn about it. Asians in Los Angeles tend to be more recent immigrants, which means you tend to be closer to the goings-on of your country of origin (e.g. the latest K-pop), if you care about that type of thing. But that can also mean that Asians in Los Angeles are farther removed from the mainstream.

Since this is a Wiki, let's hear from everyone. Asian American readers, where do you like? If you like your city, make a case for it even if it might not be exactly the "best". For example, the Korean has been curious for some time about what it's like to live in Montgomery, Alabama, where Hyundai is a major employer. Would the locals lovingly embrace Asian Americans who brought them jobs, or secretly resent their presence? Don't limit yourself to American cities either -- let's hear them all.

Got a question or a comment for the Korean? Email away at askakorean@gmail.com.

Kamis, 28 Oktober 2010

In today's "court-decision-that-makes-you-shake-your-head" news, the Constitutional Court of Korea (one of the two highest courts of Korea) ruled that the military may disallow draftees from reading certain banned books (that are freely available in bookstore and government-funded libraries.) In a separate lawsuit, the administrative court ruled that military could justifiably fire the JAG officers who challenged the constitutionality of the book ban. Because of their discharge, the JAG officers cannot practice law for the next 5 to 10 years.

서점서 파는 책, 군대선 맘대로 못보게 할수있다 [The Hankyoreh]
'헌소’ 법무관들 어떻게 되나 [The Hankyoreh]

Rabu, 27 Oktober 2010

Very clever -- Daewoo Securities, as a charity event, sold bottles of dirty water out of a vending machine for KRW 1,000 (about a dollar). For each bottle sold, Daewoo will add KRW 9,000 and donate to UNICEF for cleaning drinking water. They are aiming to sell 5,000 bottles, which will amount to KRW 50 million in proceeds after making the addition. Daewoo said they will donate KRW 50 million (around $50,000) regardless of the result of the sales.

구정물을 한병 1000원에? [Dong-A Ilbo]

Selasa, 26 Oktober 2010

Still More about Korean Names!

[Series Index]

Dear Korean,

I noticed in quite a few cases (at least on TV) that siblings share one syllable of their name. How common is this, and what is its origin? I get the sense that it is not considered as eccentric as giving all your children names which begin with the same letter. I also noticed that close friends and family sometimes will call a person by the syllable which is not shared with the sibling. What could you tell me about that?

Andrew T.


Dear Andrew,

You, sir, know how to jump the line in AAK! -- by asking questions about one of the Korean's favorite topics, Korean names. Korea's naming conventions are elaborate and unique, and the Korean never gets tired of talking about them.

What you identified is a custom called dollimja (돌림자, "circulating letters"). To understand this custom, you have to first understand the clan names of Koreans, which is explained in this post. To summarize quickly:  Koreans can generally trace their last name all the way back to the very first person who held their last name. For example, the "Kim" clan can be traced to a single, actual person who lived around the first century. Every reputable lineage society (종친회), at least one for each last name and several for large last names like "Kim", maintains the record of the lineage and the children born into the clan. Based on that record, each Korean can precisely identify, by number, how many generation s/he is from the very first ancestor of her/his last name.

In this context, the function of dollimja is to show another person what generation level you are in. The shared letter is not just shared among siblings -- it is shared among everyone who is at the same generational level. This includes your siblings, your first cousins (because their parents belong to the same generational level as your parents,) your second cousins, etc. By the same token, your father, uncles and the parents of your second cousin would all share a syllable in their names. Also, your children and nephews would all share a syllable in their names.

This tradition has weakened somewhat in modern times, but it is still fairly strong. Formerly dollimja would only cover male heirs  -- don't forget the fact that traditional Korea was very sexist -- but now it is fairly commonplace for daughters to take the dollimja as well, when the dollimja is conducive to making girls' names as well. For example, the most famous brother-sister actor-actress pair in Korean history, Choi Jin-Sil and Choi Jin-Yeong, shared the dollimja "Jin" ("truth"). In the Korean's family, all the girls took the dollimja as well.

Dollimja is unique by clan; each clan has a line of dollimja to be used for all of its children. This necessarily means that you share the dollimja with the children of your father's brother, but not with the children of your father's sister (because those children would take the last name of your father's sister's husband.)

More after the jump.

Got a question or a comment for the Korean? Email away at askakorean@gmail.com.



Who are the people who choose the particular letter? Usually it is the lineage society that decides, then communicates the letters to the heads of each extended family along with the lineage book (족보).

How is a particular letter chosen? The most dominant methodology is the "five elements" (오행) method. To understand this, you need a crash course on Chinese characters, because Korean names are still mostly (around 90 percent) based on Chinese characters. Chinese characters are logograms -- i.e. they are letters representing meanings, not sound. Each character holds a meaning, and new characters are formed by combining existing characters. So for example, 木 is a tree. 林 -- two trees -- is a forest.

Now, back to the five elements theory. In traditional Chinese philosophy, the world was consisted of five elements -- wood (木), fire (火), earth (土), metal (金), water (水). Each element not only represents the materials of the world, but also the essential spirit  within each element. So for example, wood is not simply timber, but the vivacity and strength within trees. And each element either nourishes or saps away from another element. Wood helps fire, but saps from earth. Metal helps water, but cuts down wood.

This is the order of helpfulness -- wood helps fire, which helps earth, which helps metal, which helps water, which helps wood, again. So the dollimja is chosen by picking a character with good meaning that contains a particular element within it. By going through this sequence, the name of the father will augment the name of the children, since the elemental character of the father's name is supposed to help the elemental character of the children's name.

For example, this is the dollimja sequence of Gwangsan Kim clan, Moonjeong-gong subclan, 46th through 50th generation:

X鏞 (yong, "bell"), 淵X (yeon, "lake"), X植 (shik, "to plant"), 炯X (hyeong, "bright"), X坤 (gon, "earth")

This sequence starts from "metal", and finishes with "earth". There are other methods of setting the dollimja, but it appears that the "five elements" method is the runaway favorite choice.

One last note about how to name a child with a dollimja:  most Korean names are three syllables. One of the syllables is the last (family) name. Then which one of the remaining syllable is the dollimja? Answer -- the placement alternates by generation. In the example above, "X" marks the place where a child's "true" name would go. So for example, every boy who is the 46th generation of Gwangsan Kim clan, Moonjeong-gong subclan would be named like this:  Ji-Yong, Jae-Yong, Su-Yong, Cheol-Yong, etc. Every boy at the 47th generation would be named like this:  Yeon-Su, Yeon-Hwan, Yeon-Jeong, Yeon-Kyu, etc.

Applied fully, the effect of having this unified naming system is quite amazing. Originally, the purpose of the dollimja is to precisely identify one's clan/subclan and one's generational level simply by giving one's name. This was particularly useful because in ancient Korea, people generally lived with their extended families sharing the same last name. Even in modern Korea, this is marginally useful. For example, the Korean realized that his high school teacher had the same last name as his but had a dollimja that belonged to one generation after the Korean -- and snickered at the thought that the Korean's strict, scary teacher was actually his distant nephew.

Once dollimja is explained, the custom of calling a child by just a single syllable not shared with your siblings makes perfect sense. Out of the three syllables that is a Korean name, one of them marks your last name; another marks your generational level; and the last one, finally, is your "true" name. Although some parents do call their children by that single syllable representing the "true" name, this custom is not truly widespread -- based on the Korean's anecdotal experience, it seemed that only about 1 in 10 parents call their children this way.

Got a question or a comment for the Korean? Email away at askakorean@gmail.com.

Senin, 25 Oktober 2010

Like a G6 by Far East Movement, a hiphop group made up of four Asian Americans (two of them Koreans) went platinum (selling over 1 million) and topped the Billboard's Hottest 100.

Not the Korean's cup of tea, however. His selection of recent rap is Eminem's Space Bound.

Minggu, 24 Oktober 2010

50 Most Influential K-Pop Artists: 44. Yoon Do-Hyeon

[Read more reviews from the Korean from the Library Mixer. To join, click here.]

[Series Index]

44.  Yoon Do-Hyeon (also spelled Yoon Do-Hyun) [윤도현]

Years of Activity:  1994-present

Discography:
Regular Albums (as leader of the Yoon Do-Hyeon Band)
In Front of the Autumn Post Office [가을 우체국 앞에서] (1994)
Yoon Do-Hyeon 2 [윤도현 2] (1997)
Marginalization [소외] (1998)
Re-Singing Korean Rock [한국 Rock 다시 부르기] (1999)
An Urbanite (2001)
YB Stream 6 (2003)
Why Be? (2006)
Coexistence (2009)

Special Albums and Notable Singles
Official Album of Red Devils Cheering Songs 2002 [붉은 악마 공식 응원가 앨범 2002] (2002) (contributed Arirang)
Standing on the Road - Yoon Do-Hyeon Band Photo Essay [길위에 서다 - 윤도현밴드 포토 에세이] (2005)
2006 YB World Cup Cheering Songs [2006 YB 월드컵 응원가] (2006)
Korean Peninsula Original Soundtrack [한반도 OST] (2006)

Representative Song:
  Someday [먼훗날], from Marginalization




먼훗날
Someday

널 이젠 잊겠어 
I will now forget you
내 깊은 그리움으로 이밤을 지새운건 아니었는데
I did not spend this night longing deeply for you
이제는 닦아 낼 눈물이 없어
But I have no more tear to wipe
하고픈 말 서럽게 쌓여만 가고
The words I want to say only piles on sadly

기억되는 그리움의 아픔이 너무 두려워
So afraid of the remembered pain of longing
홀로 남겨진 이 순간 원할건 없지만
This moment, left alone, although I have nothing more to want

정말 널 사랑해
I really love you, 
차마 그말 한마디 못한 내가 너무나도 원망스러워
I blame myself for not being able to say just that one word
먼훗날 다시 널 우연히 마주칠수 있다면
Someday if by chance I may see you again
사랑했다 말할거야
I will tell you, I loved you.

Translation note: Truly well-done poetry in Korean -- which uses all possible angles of ambiguities that Korean language allows -- is darn near impossible to translate elegantly. This is one such occasion. Suggestions are welcome.

In 15 words or less:  The rightful heir of Korean rock, evaluator of true talent.

Maybe he should be ranked higher because...  The game-changing nature of his TV show (described below) is easy to underestimate.

Maybe they should be ranked lower because...  If he is ranked for not-strictly-musical influence, shouldn't Lee Su-Man (of the SM music group) be ranked higher than him?

Why is this artist important?
Among the followers of Korea's rock scene, this placement might feel high -- because just in terms of musical quality, one can make a strong case that Yoon Do-Hyeon is not particularly special. But it is Yoon's period of activity that makes him particularly influential. In terms of relative influence, the nadir of Korean rock was late 1990s through early 2000s. The airwaves were utterly dominated by boy/girl bands, and it appeared that rock was being driven to the brink of extinction. Yoon Do-Hyeon Band was one of the few bands that stuck it out during those dark times, trudging along while churning out quality albums.

Rock made an unexpected comeback in 2002, and Yoon was at the heart of revival. Yoon's band was one of the bands that wrote some of the most popular songs for Korean national soccer team playing in the 2002 FIFA World Cup. It is not an exaggeration that Yoon Do-Hyeon Band, along with one other rock band (to be introduced in this ranking later) led the renaissance of Korean rock that is resonating to this day.

This is already a substantial achievement, but Yoon's influence on K-pop scene was arguably greater in his other activity -- playing host of the TV show, Yoon Do-Hyeon's Love Letter, from 2002 to 2008. Love Letter was a music-focused late night show, in which singers interspersed serious yet entertaining dialogue with the host with real, live performances. The show's effect on the K-pop scene should not be underestimated. When other music-related TV shows were slowly turning into various levels of insults to intelligence, Love Letter was rigorous about the choice of real, talented artists to feature, and strict about the requirement to perform live. Much of that rigor was driven by Yoon's personal force, as an intelligent artist who always cared about the quality of pop music in Korea. Yoon's energetic and witty personality was an indispensable ingredient that allowed the show to go on strong for seven years, acting as a litmus test that showed who was real, and who was produced.

Interesting trivia:  Although never confirmed, it was widely suspected that Yoon quit Love Letter because of the pressure applied by Korea's current conservative administration, as Yoon was an active voice of Korea's liberals.

Got a question or a comment for the Korean? Email away at askakorean@gmail.com.