Thursday, April 8, 2010

G Dragon's Controversial Concert...

This is an article written by Michael Breen. An author, former foreign correspondent and the chairman of Insight Communications, a public relations consulting company. I think all he said in his opinion are thoroughly explained. I've read many of Breen's article about Korea especially the ones about Korean Image.

When the singer G-Dragon, in his first solo performance without his group Big Bang, featured a short horror movie of himself murdering a woman and had simulated sex with a backup dancer chained to a bed, the Ministry of Health, Welfare and Family Affairs thought he had gone too far in front of the youthful audience and filed obscenity charges.
The subsequent interrogation of G-Dragon (real name Kwon Ji-yong) by prosecutors in February raised questions about the use of law to protect social mores in a democracy where those mores are constantly changing.
Does the interference of state authority with artists ― and a visit to the prosecutors is a message in itself ― over the moral content of their art, protect us ― and in this case, minors ― from harm? Or does it intrude on an artist's freedom and creativity and, in this way, damage society?
Isolated from the context, the performance seems shocking to parents. But the audience was young and the music they like is not about passing French exams and getting into Seoul National University. It's about teenage idealism, insecurity, rebellion, and, underlying it all, love and sex. Was it shocking to them?
In the end, YG Entertainment was fined 3 million won, for including two songs (with the lewd bits) that had been ruled unsuitable for minors when the album was released. But no charges were brought against the performer. (The DVD of the full performance comes out this month with a separate edited version for under-19s).
However, from a strictly legal point of view, G-Dragon's performance may well have been obscene. The Supreme Court has in the past interpreted obscenity as that which provokes people's sexual desire and causes the public to feel shame, therefore possibly harming people's mental and physical motivations.
If prosecutors had applied this test, interviewed the audience, and found that a majority had actually felt aroused and ashamed, a court would have had no choice but to find him guilty.
But, to return to our question, would such an outcome be desirable? More broadly, do laws designed to protect public morals work?
One thing about such laws is that enforcement is erratic and therefore unfair. Michael Jackson was not arrested in Korea, for example, when he thrust his pelvis and grabbed his crotch in a performance. Nor did the teenage children of officials at the Ministry of Health, Welfare and Family Affairs file a class action complaint against the minister in January when she announced that once a month she was switching the lights off at the ministry at 7p.m. to encourage officials to go home early and have sex. Given how revolting parental sex appears to most normal teenagers, the ministry's campaign to raise the birth rate could be considered offensive.
Inconsistent application, however, is not always that bad. Sometimes, you need to set an example. There are many cases in history when prosecutors could have singled out victims to protect society and its members. If, for example, Roman prosecutors had arrested the entertainment company which organized one of the first Coliseum events where Christians were mauled and eaten in public by lions, that society may not have degenerated into moral chaos, and many lives would have been saved.
On the other hand, it's clearly possible for acts in the name of protecting society to be excessive. For example, did the policemen in the 1970s who forcibly cut the long hair of young men successfully protect Korean society from moral decline, as the law intended? No. In fact, not so long after, the establishment that devised this law was rejected by the society it tried to protect.
That is not to say that long hair was not a social issue. It was. Arguments about it took place in every home in Europe and North America where there were teenagers. My father, who was a British air force officer, felt that people wore long hair to signal they rejected what was good in society. This may have been true of some young people, but for others, long hair symbolized the rejection of the pursuit money and status. For most, it was just the fashion.
Fortunately, the law in free countries stayed away from this argument because individual freedom was considered more important than hairstyles.
This was an easier decision to make in the West than in Korea. The underlying theme of western cultural history is disobedience. Ever since Adam and Eve disobeyed God, Westerners have been defying previous generations, and regenerating their culture.
Of Korean virtues, on the other hand, obedience to parents and elders comes top. Every Korean family seems to have its own unspoken stories of suffering that come from the struggle to suppress self in the interests of obedience to parents and social expectation.
But that is now changing. And as the idea of acceptable expression in society changes, prosecutors need to know when to act and when to stay still.

Michael Breen can be reached at mike.breen@insightcomms.com.
"Is Korea Interfering With Art?"
http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/opinon/2010/04/137_63874.html

9 comments:

  1. 보고싶당...ㅋㅋ

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  2. ㅋㅋ 그래요? DVD 벌써 있는데요..

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  3. just read it now.

    "prosecutors need to know when to act and when to stay still."

    salute to that line. sometimes, these prosecutors are actually going too much. and sometimes it's kind'a funny how they interpret songs:)) LOL. sorry but sometimes, they're already going too far.:))

    i don't want to comment more. you know, i'm kind'a biased with this topic:))

    miss you kuya jm:) when are you coming home? if possible, do bring this person here.;)) i'd love to see him here:)) LOL

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  4. I know right? hehe. gusto ko na tuloy bumili nung dvd. hehe ^^ next month nako balik ng pinas ^^

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  5. kilala mo ako kahit anonymous ako?:)) LOL. KUYA, my 미남이시네요 clip, don't forget:)) HAHA<3 u. salamuch:D

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  6. 2 lang kasi kaung sinendan ko ng link so inassume ko na ikaw na...haha. yung 미남이시네요 na clip triny ko maghanap ng twice na ata kaso wala akong mahanap...try ko ulit ha pag punta ako

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  7. I really Hate G-Dragon (not just for this), he isn't going against Korean norms for a good cause he is doing it just for shock value and media... Anyway.. America has deteriorated due to the fact we don't respect or care for the people around us and If Korea follows they will also find their society will loose much of it's kind heart. When Sex defines a society like in the west it really becomes a hassle and a burden.. and society becomes more selfish

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  8. This comment has been removed by the author.

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