Geographical

SHRIMP TO WHALE

South Korea from the Forgotten War to K-Pop

- By Ramon Pacheco Pardo Hurst & Co.

Across seven decades, South Korea has faced colonial repression, three years of devastatin­g war, the desolation of mass poverty and a painful evolution from dictatorsh­ip to liberal democracy, before finally emerging as an economic and cultural powerhouse. Ramon Pacheco Pardo, head of the Department of European and Internatio­nal

Studies at King’s College, documents this extraordin­ary transforma­tion, ‘from shrimp to whale’, achieved as much by the working class that forced politician­s to create more equitable economic conditions as by the nation’s leaders. Only a people imbued with an indomitabl­e will to preserve their culture could have withstood 35 years of Japanese rule, when Koreans became secondclas­s citizens in their own country and witnessed a ruthless attempt to eradicate their cultural history.

Then, no sooner had Korea been liberated in 1945, the peninsula was split into two, creating the 38th parallel demilitari­sed zone, which separated the Russiandom­inated north from the US-backed south. Thus came into being North and South Korea.

Having thrown off the yoke of imperialis­m,

South Korea has ploughed on through the turbulence of revolution, coup d’état, four constituti­ons and six republics to become one of the world’s largest economies, powered by hi-tech industry and what the author regards as its ‘cool and fashionabl­e’ trendsetti­ng culture. A major change has been that people are no longer happy with a 70–80-hour work week, Pacheco Pardo explains. They want to enjoy a more European lifestyle and obtain greater corporate benefits. ‘This is especially true of the youth,’ he writes. ‘The number of women in the workforce has increased dramatical­ly and we are seeing more women in managerial roles. In fact, there are more women involved in start-ups than in Silicon Valley.’ Demographi­cs are also undergoing a dramatic change. Population numbers are on the decline and Pacheco Pardo sees little chance of a reversal in this trend. As a result, South Korea’s next challenge will be to adapt to an ageing population. According to the author, more women need to join the workforce and, given the shortage of workers, companies will have to increase their reliance on technology and robots.

There is, of course, also the continual menace of confrontat­ion with North Korea. Pacheco Pardo believes reconcilia­tion with the dictatorsh­ip depends on Pyongyang, albeit the North has so far failed to take any meaningful steps in this direction.

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SEAN PAVONE/SHUTTERSTO­CK
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