1st Edition
The Intimate Violence of South Korean and Japanese Cinema
List of Figures Acknowledgments A Note on Romanization Introduction 1 “Laugh Together, Cry Alone”: The Strange Optimism of Oldboy 2 “Warning, This Asian Man Is Violent”: Recession and the Downtrodden Male Body in Hana-bi 3 “How Can You Kill Each Other So Easily?”: Battle Royale, Intimate Violence, and the Zero-Sum-Game of Post-Crisis Japan 4 Intimate Violence Inverted: Gender, Family, and Class in The Glory 5 Squid Game and the Cruelty of Korean Gamespace Conclusion Index
Biography
Se Young Kim is an assistant professor of global cinema and digital media in the Cinema Studies Department at Colby College. His research interests include South Korean, Japanese, and US cinema and media, including videogames and streaming media, with a focus on the use of violence.
“In Se Young Kim’s innovative new book, intimate violence is nothing less than the troubled political consciousness of Korean and Japanese modernity, its uneasy mode of contradictory sociality shot through with the historical burdens of war, colonialism, and necrocapitalism, seeking to harm that which it also wants to hold close in embrace. This is a bold study that peers intently into the beating heart of contemporary East Asian popular culture and its dark entanglements.”
Joseph Jonghyun Jeon, Professor of English, University of California, Irvine, and Author of Vicious Circuits“The Intimate Violence of South Korean and Japanese Cinema takes a hammer to our notions of shock, blood, and gore. Slashing away the notion that brutality is just spectacle, Se Young Kim shows that in films and series like Hana-bi, Oldboy, Battle Royale, and The Glory, the aesthetics of violence is a language spoken in communities with shared histories, debts, and wounds. The book offers a groundbreaking account of cultural exchange, tracing for instance how Squid Game did not arrive sui generis but emerged from a long-shared repertoire of styles,
forms, and preoccupations. Kim reveals how this vision of Japanese and Korean cultural products is inseparable from the region’s experience of compressed modernity – its wrenching social transformations and broken promises. This book insists that the global appetite for this cinema is not desensitization. It is an invitation to look at ourselves.”
Jonathan E. Abel, Professor of Asian Studies and Comparative Literature at Penn State University and Author of The New Real“The Intimate Violence of South Korean and Japanese Cinema deftly situates Japan and South Korea alongside Hollywood as co-shapers of contemporary simulated violence, tracing the economic and aesthetic entanglements that drove both regional production and global circulation from the late 1990s onward. Through the concept of “intimate violence,” Kim offers a novel theorization of screen brutality as a relational and representational technology put to work by media brokers navigating the pressures of compressed neoliberal modernity. At a moment when Korean Wave (Hallyu) media has achieved undeniable global reach, the book reminds scholars of contemporary media – including a game studies field still largely anchored in Western frameworks – to reckon with the longer economic, regional, and sociocultural histories that made that reach possible.”
Tara Fickle, Associate Professor of Asian American Studies at Northwestern University and Author of The Race Card: From Gaming Technologies to Model Minorities






