Second-Generation Korean Americans and Transnational Media:
Diasporic Identifications looks at the relationship between
second-generation Korean Americans and Korean popular culture.
Specifically looking at Korean films, celebrities, and popular
media, David C. Oh combines intrapersonal processes of
identification with social identities to understand how these
individuals use Korean popular culture to define authenticity and
construct group difference and hierarchy. Oh highlights new
findings on the ways these Korean Americans construct themselves
within their youth communities. This work is a comprehensive
examination of second-generation Korean American ethnic identity,
reception of transnational media, and social uses of transnational
media.
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