Reading a book on BTS by a Seoul National University professor of cultural studies, and it’s really interesting. She had published a book back in 2013 about the so-called Hallyu/Korean Wave, before BTS had debuted, but right after Psy’s Gangnam Style had broken all sorts of records on YouTube. She’s been studying the topic since the early 2000s which is the very start of the Hallyu Wave so she has a ton of insights on the unique global rise of BTS.

This is already a fascinating read!

One of the best classes I took in college (late 90s) was called Race & Gender in Asian America. We examined our identity & representation through the lens of media: books, movies, tv shows, and music.

I loved this class—and the other classes I took w/ the same Asian American history professor—because it taught me so much about how I view myself, how society views me, and how history shaped both.

I wonder what it would be like to take a similar class right now, with the meteoric rise of K-pop.

“Chapter 5 is an analysis of how BTS as East Asians and Koreans-are shifting the racial imagination of a Caucasian-dominated world. How could they, for the first time in history, turn Koreans and East Asians into objects of attraction while facing many prejudices of race and gender along the way? In this chapter, I analyze how the regionalism of BTS meets globalism, and how the countless fans of the world are nurturing their racial imaginations by joining BTS's journey.”

“Chapter 6 is […] about the new masculinity and new gender sensibility that BTS brings. A new masculinity is being shaped by the Korean Wave, K-pop stars, and now BTS-which emits a sense of liberation to the young generations of the world. This chapter will argue that around the world young people are reappropriating the masculinity displayed by East Asian entertainment cultures. As a result, a new identity and sensibility is found at the intersection between races and genders.”

Fucking yes! 👏🏼

Such a huge part of the western narrative about East Asians is that the women are demure & obedient sex kittens and the men are emasculated, unattractive, undesirable, backwards caricatures to rescue/white knight the women from.

That’s been going on for generations. Fuck that narrative.

@eingy you might be unsurprised to learn that in gay circles, East Asian men get to be treated as both emasculated AND demure sex kittens

there was a really interesting essay about this in the NYT a month or two ago, focusing on how the author's experience with this dovetailed with a latex fetish -- a chance to put on a different skin, almost literally.

(and anecdotally I've seen it in otherwise progressive community spaces too.)

@relsqui Exactly! 😭 I’ve also heard from gay friends that even in the Bay Area, there is a lot of “no Asians” as stated preferences on grindr and if not that, looking for East Asian men exclusively to be subs 😢

And I know this type of fetishized racialization happens to all global majority folks. 😢

I’ll have to look up that essay! Thank you!

My Fetish for a Second Skin

As a gay Korean American, I yearned for the privilege of being heterosexual or white. So I began wearing latex, a new skin.

The New York Times
@relsqui thank you!!!!