Events

Past Event

The Making of the Korean Recording Industry: 1910 - 1945

May 6, 2019
2:00 PM - 4:00 PM
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International Affairs Building, 420 W. 118 St., New York, NY 10027 Room 918
CKR Manuscript Workshop The Making of the Korean Recording Industry: 1910 - 1945 Dissertation Author, Hye Eun Choi, Korea Foundation Postdoctoral Fellow Discussants: Charles Armstrong, Columbia University Kim Brandt, Columbia University Michael Denning, Yale University Keith Howard, SOAS, University of London Monday, May 6, 2019 2:00 PM – 4:00 PM International Affairs Building, Room 918 By RSVP only - open only to graduate students and faculty for observation. Must RSVP at [email protected] to attend as an observer. My manuscript, tentatively titled The Making of the Korean Recording Industry (1910-1945), is the first book project that traces the birth of the Korean recording industry at the intersection of capitalism, colonialism, and globalized modern sound culture. Through an examination of government, media, and corporate sources, I demonstrate that transnational record companies, rather than colonial authority, initiated the formation of the recording industry in the Japanese Empire in the early 20th century. That is, utilizing funding, technology, and master recordings from the West, the record companies sought profits in both Japan and its colonies. Their activities in turn helped expose Korean audiences to globally popular recorded music almost simultaneously with audiences in the Japanese metropole. In addition, the record companies allowed Korean sound professionals to manage the production of Korean records due to their ability to create successful products in their own market. Therefore, along with their Japanese counterparts, these professionals produced Korean records in globally influenced yet locally inflected genres which were consumed across East Asia. Rather than approaching Korean sound professionals as a monolithic group of colonized subjects, I pay close attention to the ways in which sound professionals of various educational backgrounds, genders, and social positions negotiated, competed, and cooperated to earn reputations in their fields and receive the financial rewards they desired. My dissertation thus foregrounds their individual agency in the modern transformation of sound culture in colonial Korea. Co-sponsored by The Academy of Korean Studies, Seoul Korea; Columbia Alumni Association, Korea; the Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures

Contact Information

Jooyeon Kim
212 854 1728