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Series: The Roots of Hallyu

Yun Dong-ju: The Man Who Wrote in Silence (Part 1-1)

02/06/2026 by Kam Su Jin
illustrated portrait of Yun Dong-ju with Korean landscape inspired by traditional minhwa art
This entry is part 1 of 18 in the series The Roots of Hallyu

In July 1943, Yun Dong-ju was arrested for maintaining consciousness. By 1948, his notebooks proved the empire had failed.

Categories K-Culture Tags Yun Dong-ju, Korean Literature, Colonial Resistance, Japanese Occupation, Memory, Poetry, Roots of Hallyu Leave a comment

Yun Dong-ju: Poetry as Testimony — The Spiritual Legacy (Part 1-2)

02/06/2026 by Kam Su Jin
illustrated graduation portrait inspired by Yun Dong-ju’s poetry and Korean cultural landscape
This entry is part 2 of 18 in the series The Roots of Hallyu

Yun Dong-ju’s Poetry survived Japanese occupation through quiet testimony, shaping Korean literature and echoing across generations worldwide.

Categories K-Culture Leave a comment

Choi Seung-hee Dance — The Star | Roots of Hallyu (Part 2-1)

03/06/2026 by Kam Su Jin
Illustration inspired by Choi Seung-hee dance, blending Korean traditional art, modern dance, and vintage Korean culture motifs.
This entry is part 3 of 18 in the series The Roots of Hallyu

When Korea was unknown, Choi Seung-hee dance spoke to Paris and New York. Global stages. International acclaim. No shortcuts. Just artistry.

Categories K-Culture Tags Choi Seung-hee, Korean Dance, Modern Dance, Paris, The Roots of Hallyu, Global Star, New York Leave a comment

Choi Seung-hee Legacy — Silence | Roots of Hallyu (Part 2-2)

03/06/2026 by Kam Su Jin
Illustration representing Choi Seung-hee legacy through Korean traditional dance, modern artistry, and cultural identity.
This entry is part 4 of 18 in the series The Roots of Hallyu

From Paris to silence. Choi Seung-hee legacy vanished not through failure but through history. Her later years remain undocumented. Why?

Categories K-Culture Tags Korean Dance, The Roots of Hallyu, K-Culture, Cultural Erasure, Performance History, Choi Seung-hee Leave a comment

Kim Ki-young — A Camera Instead of a Scalpel (Part 3-1)

04/06/2026 by Kam Su Jin
Traditional Korean house in folk painting style, reflecting the closed space and tension central to Kim Ki-young cinema.
This entry is part 5 of 18 in the series The Roots of Hallyu

A dental student who chose film instead. Why successful directors of his era vanished, and why Kim Ki-young became cinema’s essential voice.

Categories K-Culture Tags cinema history, Hallyu, auteur, film director, The Housemaid, Korean cinema, Kim Ki-young Leave a comment

Kim Ki-young — Hell Inside the Home (Part 3-2)

04/06/2026 by Kam Su Jin
Traditional Korean hanok courtyard in folk painting style reflecting the enclosed space and atmosphere of The Housemaid.
This entry is part 6 of 18 in the series The Roots of Hallyu

Kim Ki-young’s The Housemaid: Why a 1960 film about a wife, maid, and house became the blueprint international filmmakers use to understand systems.

Categories K-Culture Tags power structures, The Housemaid, cinema history, film analysis, character study, 1960s cinema, family dynamics Leave a comment

Kim Ki-young Cinema — Experimental Laboratory (Part 3-3)

05/06/2026 by Kam Su Jin
Modern interior staircase reflecting layered space, hierarchy, and trapped structure in Kim Ki-young cinema.
This entry is part 7 of 18 in the series The Roots of Hallyu

After The Housemaid, Kim Ki-young cinema kept asking the same question. Why a filmmaker spent 40 years returning to one house, one system, one truth.

Categories K-Culture Tags Structure, Kim Ki-young, cinema history, film analysis, filmmaker obsession, experimental film, systems Leave a comment

Isang Yun — A Boy’s Music (Part 4-1)

05/06/2026 by Kam Su Jin
Traditional Korean palace and modern city skyline reflecting the East-West identity central to Isang Yun’s life and music.
This entry is part 8 of 18 in the series The Roots of Hallyu

A boy in Manchuria listening to the wind, Isang Yun fused East and West into a borderless sound, reshaping modern music beyond nation and tradition.

Categories K-Culture Tags avant-garde, Berlin Philharmonic, Isang Yun, contemporary classical music, 20th century music, music history, Korean composer, composer biography Leave a comment

Isang Yun’s Exile — Kidnap and Music (Part 4-2)

06/06/2026 by Kam Su Jin
Traditional Korean pavilion in folk painting style reflecting memory, distance, and identity in Isang Yun's exile.
This entry is part 9 of 18 in the series The Roots of Hallyu

Kidnapped, tortured, exiled to West Germany. How Isang Yun’s exile became transcendence—creating the 20th century’s most essential music.

Categories K-Culture Tags Isang Yun, contemporary classical music, 20th century music, composer biography, Isang Yun's exile, political kidnapping, KCIA, East Germany Leave a comment

Nam June Paik — A Piano Breaks (Part 5-1)

06/06/2026 by Kam Su Jin
Spring tree branches and sunlight forming a layered canopy above, reflecting the artistic transformation of Nam June Paik
This entry is part 10 of 18 in the series The Roots of Hallyu

Born into a wealthy Seoul family, Nam June Paik learned piano as a path to refinement. Then war and John Cage taught him something else: how to break it.

Categories K-Culture Tags video art, Nam June Paik, Fluxus, Korean artist, Baek Nam-june, prepared piano, electronic music, contemporary art, John Cage Leave a comment
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