1st Edition
International Relations and the Development of Korea’s Film Industry
Prologue: Linking Korea’s film industry and international relations
1 The emergence under Japan’s imperialism (1903–1945)
2 The paradox of the Korean War (1945–1961)
3 Cold War dynamics and the developmental dictatorship (1961–1979)
4 Survival amidst US trade pressure (1980–1992)
5 Post-Cold War uncertainty and co-productions (1993–2000s)
6 The rise of China and its impact (2000s–present)
Epilogue: Global dialogues, local screens, and a continued journey
Index
Biography
Jimmyn Parc is an associate professor at the University of Malaya, Malaysia. His current research centres on the cultural industries of Asia and Europe, particularly films, dramas, and music. He is the author of The Identity and Emergence of K-pop, published in 2025.
Stephen Ranger is a research associate at European Centre for International Political Econom (ECIPE) in Brussels and a doctoral researcher at the University of Turku in Finland. With a background in Korean studies, he has written articles on the history of film industries in Asia as well as on contemporary international politics.






