By Susanna Lim
On May 27, the seven-member South Korean boy band BTS became the first K-pop act to top the Billboard 200 chart with their third album, Love Yourself: Tear.
A week earlier, BTS had won top social artist for the second year in a row at the 2018 Billboard Music Awards, beating out the likes of Justin Bieber and Ariana Grande. During the show, they performed their single Fake Love to the screams of adoring American fans, who seemed to have no trouble singing along to the songs mostly Korean lyrics.
As someone who studies and teaches modern Korean culture, Ive been following the ebb and flow of K-pops popularity in the U.S. with a mix of interest and skepticism. Like Euny Hong, author of The Birth of Korean Cool (2014), I, too, am more familiar with a time when Korea was simply not cool by Western standards.
For decades, Americans seemed to only think of Korea through the lens of the Korean War and diplomatic tensions with North Korea. Korean pop music barely registered.
But as I listened to MIC Drop and Fake Love on a local radio station during a recent trip to campus, it struck me that K-pop may have entered a new phase. The genres growing popularity says as much about the talent of groups like BTS as it does about the countrys expanding role in global affairs.
A perfect aesthetic
K-pop is a particular style of South Korean popular music thats distinguishable from other popular forms of Korean music, such as trot and sentimental ballads. Many trace its origins to the early 1990s, but the genre came into its own in the 2000s and 2010s, with acts such as BoA, Wonder Girls, Girls Generation, TVXQ, Big Bang and 2NE1 becoming hugely popular in Asia and beyond.
The pop part of K-pop seems easy enough; youll hear American pop musical influences mostly dance pop, but also rap, hip-hop, R&B, jazz, techno and rock in K-pop songs.
But what about the K? This is where the unique Korean flair plays a role: infectious melodies sung mostly in Korean, a few English words strategically placed in the sing-along refrain, and single-sex groups made up of seven to 15 members.
In my view, the biggest aspect of K-pops appeal is the group members relentless pursuit of perfection. Their performances involve perfectly synchronized choreography. They also tend to have a very specific look that reflects idealized Caucasian beauty standards: a small, chiseled face, large eyes, a straight nose, long legs and trendy outfits.
K-pops global ambition is another quality that distinguishes the genre from other Korean music. Exporting K-pop to the rest of the world is not only a goal of the Korean music industry, but also a government priority. For example, at the Pyongchang Winter Olympics, organizers prominently featured K-pop performers EXO and CL in the closing ceremony.
For decades, South Korea was a war-torn, poverty-stricken country. But beginning in the 1960s and 1970s, under the rule of dictator Park Chung-hee, the country embarked on an ambitious program of economic development, and, in less than a half century, the nation transformed into one of the worlds leading economic powers.
For many young Koreans, K-pop stars represent their ideal image of themselves; for Korean leaders, they symbolize the promising future of their country.
A unique appeal
And yet, until recently, most Americans could probably name only one or two K-pop groups.
Many got their first taste of K-pop following Psys 2012 global hit Gangnam Style. The song, an ironic paean to the glitzy superficiality of Gangnam, a wealthy area of Seoul, racked up 1 billion YouTube views by the end of 2012.
But some wouldnt consider Psy and his hit single a true reflection of K-pop.
In Gangnam Style, Westerners were exposed to a cartoonish parody of K-pop, a tongue-in-cheek performance that gives off vibes of orientalism and exoticism. Audiences, especially in the West, liked it not because they viewed Psy as an artist, but simply because Gangnam was entertainingly weird.
BTS breakthrough shows that in just six years, K-pop and Americans view of K-pop have come a long way.
What did BTS do differently? Through social media, BTS members have been able to counter some of the stigmas about Asians that in the past may have hindered K-pops popularity in the U.S.
Research has shown that Westerners tend to stereotypically view Asians as a vague, collective mass that robotically imitates the West. They assign them the negative qualities of capitalism materialism and cutthroat competitiveness while downplaying Asians self-assertion and individuality, which are qualities valued by Western societies.
But unlike other K-pop groups, BTS have done more than perfect their choreography and looks. They also put their personalities on full display.
Via social media, theyve been able to connect with and cultivate a community of utterly devoted fans. On Twitter in English and in Korean group members give fans a window into their lives, express themselves, and talk about issues important to teens, from mental health to body image.
As one of my students told me, Fans feel like they see the real members and their personalities.
Koreas new global identity
Make no mistake, BTS is a product of Korea. Its members are driven by the same work ethic that drive millions of Korean youth to hit the books in hagwon, the countrys notorious cram schools.
But the group does seem to represent a new, more comfortable negotiation of Korean and global identities that has emerged in recent years.
In 1997, Korea experienced a financial crisis. The country was on the brink of economic collapse, and massive shutdowns and layoffs ensued. The crisis, known in Korea as the IMF crisis due to the tough bailout package that the International Monetary Fund forced Korea to accept, devastated many families.
But it also led to a program of intense economic and cultural globalization
that opened the doors to foreign investment, made South Korea the most wired country in the world, and exposed Koreans to global culture and media.
In contrast to Korean-Americans or the Gangnam-born Psy, all seven members hail from regional cities like Busan and Gwangju. Born from 1992 to 1997, theyre part of the generation that grew up in South Korea during the post-IMF reforms that exposed them to American culture and the English language from the moment they learned to walk and talk.
Late last year, during BTS appearance on The Ellen DeGeneres Show, host Ellen compared the pandemonium that greeted them at LAX to Beatlemania.
But in the U.S., BTS faces two barriers the British band never had to worry about: race and language. American popular culture has a long history of excluding Asians, and there were hints of racism and xenophobia after BTS won their first Billboard award a year ago.
It might be too early to tell if BTS will be at the forefront of a K-pop Invasion. But its clear that theyve been able to bridge some of the divides that have prevented K-pop from catching on in the U.S.
We saw it during the Billboard Music Awards when, during their speech, BTS thanked their fans in English and in Korean.
Susanna Lim, Associate Professor, Korean and Russian studies, University of Oregon
This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.