THURSDAY MARCH 25, 7pm
Toronto Women’s Bookstore
73 Harbord Street
we regret our washroom is not wheelchair accessible
all our events and courses are trans inclusive.
South Koreans in the Debt Crisis is a detailed examination of the logic
underlying the neoliberal welfare state that South Korea created in response
to the devastating Asian Debt Crisis (1997-2001). Jesook Song argues that
while the government proclaimed that it would guarantee all South Koreans a
minimum standard of living, it prioritized assisting those citizens
perceived as embodying the neoliberal ideals of employability, flexibility,
and self-sufficiency. Song demonstrates that the government was not alone in
drawing distinctions between the "deserving" and the "undeserving" poor.
Progressive intellectuals, activists, and organizations also participated in
the neoliberal reform project. Song traces the circulation of neoliberal
concepts throughout South Korean society, among government officials, the
media, intellectuals, NGO members, and educated underemployed people working
in public works programs. She analyzes the embrace of partnerships between
NGOs and the government, the frequent invocation of a pervasive decline in
family values, the resurrection of conservative gender norms and practices,
and the promotion of entrepreneurship as the key to survival.
Drawing on her experience during the crisis as an employee in a public works
program in Seoul, Song provides an ethnographic assessment of the efforts of
the state and civilians to regulate social insecurity, instability, and
inequality through assistance programs. She focuses specifically on efforts
to help two populations deemed worthy of state subsidies: the "IMF
homeless," people temporarily homeless but considered employable, and the
"new intellectuals," young adults who had become professionally redundant
during the crisis but had the high-tech skills necessary to lead a
transformed post-crisis South Korea.
Jesook Song is Associate Professor of East Asian Studies at the University
of Toronto.
Co-sponsored by Duke University Press.