A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

The Presentation of the Korean Self with Everyday Food: Negotiating “Koreanness” through Kimchi Diplomacy in Contemporary Japan




AuthorsDemelius Yoko

PublisherThe Kyujanggak Institute for Korean Studies

Publication year2023

JournalSeoul Journal of Korean Studies

Volume36

Issue1

First page 87

Last page116

eISSN1225-0201

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1353/seo.2023.a902135

Web address https://doi.org/10.1353/seo.2023.a902135


Abstract

This study explores domestic cultural diplomacy efforts to brand “Koreaness” using kimchi as a medium of civic movement for minority awareness and intercultural dialogue in Japan. Amid current global consumption trends, popular Korean dishes, including kimchi, have become diffused among the many other international dishes appropriated in Japan. Once negatively regarded in Japan as immigrants' food that symbolized ethnic Koreans' marginalization, many now consider kimchi to be a comfort food. Although some Korean residents perceive kimchi's popularity in Japan as a sign of reduced skepticism toward and gradual acceptance of Koreanness and Korean residents in Japanese society, Many Koreans approach kimchi as a medium through which they express their Koreanness and negotiate their position as an ethnic minority in relation to Japan's “homogeneous” national identity. Discussions surrounding the production and consumption of kimchi in Japan reveal the delicate negotiations at play in the Korean minority's assertion of proper Koreanness in Japan. Based on ethnographic work conducted among Korean communities in western Japan, this study investigates the performative and preservation efforts that the Korean community undertakes to sustain their ethnicity while becoming an increasingly integral part of Japanese society.



Last updated on 2025-27-03 at 21:54