POP CULTURE SEMIOTICS 101
(Or...A modest explanation for the
success of Gangnam Style)
Seeing as Gangnam Style is everywhere
at the moment, I thought I'd humbly suggest a reason for its runaway
viral success, and a suggest its implications.
You could try to explain the sheer
magnitude of its global cultural domination by citing the goofy
charisma of its chubby rap-protagonist, Psy, and the song's eminently
imitable dance moves. Perhaps the bright colours, sense of humour and
catchy tune are to blame. Maybe its the loving and uniquely South
Korean homage to the visual tropes of bling hip-hop culture.
But those things are mainly just
signifiers: the elements that strike you on first viewing. It's not
the text that matters; it's the subtext and the context.
And the context of the hip-hop / bling
/ rap music video seems key to me.
Now I'm no expert, but it seems to me
that there's an undercurrent of Western cultural condescension here,
because there is a disconnect between the the message that Psy is
intending to send and the way the message is being received.
Gangnam Style is actually a satire on
the pretension of Seoul's wealthy citizens. To use the technical
term, it's a pisstake.
It's irony proof already because Psy
knows what he is doing.
But of course, stripped of that context
and subtext, we in the West try to understand it within our own
cultural parameters. And that means bringing forth our patronising
Western colonial attitudes to Far Eastern culture. If you don't know
any better, Gangnam Style is a bad photocopy of American youth
culture, a Chinese whisper of hip hop swagger that sounds like “hey,
sexy lady!”.
Even in these super-connected times, to
us, the East is still peculiarly foreign, particularly other.
But, of course, they still want to be Western right? Or more exactly:
American.
So the ignorant West condescends to
their assumed innocence.
Like watching a four year-old being
Joseph in a nativity play, “ah bless, how sweet! Look how hard he's
trying!”.
I've done something similar to this
myself.
For the 2002 World Cup, I was entranced
by the mass-orchestrated, cherry-red clad hordes of South Koreans
watching their team's extraordinary run to the semi-finals on giant
screens in public squares. What a fabulously biddable, pliant and
obedient race, I thought. For them to – all of a sudden – really
really like football now, when heretofore they were completely
ambivalent.
I pictured them each being summoned
individually to an oak-lined government office, where a stern
apparatchik sat each one of them down and said: “You really really
like football, now. Goodbye.” And then ink-stamped their hand to
make it official.
Having had South Koreans as clients,
let me tell you: they are not biddable. And they are not at all
pliant. Very into their heirarchies though.
In fact, Gangnam Style's success
is a symptom of something much more interesting. It's a sign that
South Korean pop culture products can achieve global success, and as
such it's a sign that South Korea has come of age as a major cultural
player in the global entertainment economy.
Economics at school taught me that
every nation has three industry sectors: Primary, Secondary and
Tertiary. Primary industry covers mineral extraction and food1,
Secondary is mainly manufacturing stuff, and Tertiary is the service
sector. The social, people-focused industries. The kind of job where
you sit in pointless meetings all day, tell your friends that you're
really busy and go home at the end of day feeling empty, having
achieved nothing. Mature, modern countries create the majority of
their wealth in the Tertiary sector.
Well, entertainment products are in
that third sector, too. And after Britain's empire gave the world
its sports and the American empire its popular music, suddenly
there's a gap in the market, or rather a vast swathe of global niches
to be filled.
Japan blazed the trail in the 1980s
with anime, manga, Transformers, Nintendo and lots more. After Sony
spent thirty years creating the best electronic devices, the West was
ready to accept, and to love, and to buy, what the Japanese created
for those devices.
Now the global village is ready for
South Korea. Sure, there have been some great South Korean cult
horror and action movies and K-Pop has a growing fanbase, but now
they have truly arrived.
And by the way, the South Korea is
light years ahead of the West in mobile technology. They've had 3G
and 100% ownership of mobile phones for a decade. They have the
fastest broadband connections on earth. Behaviours they consider
second nature, and skills they have developed for over a decade, are
emerging here in the West, and likely to dominate all kinds of
tertiary economic sectors for the foreseeable future.
We are going to learn a lot more about
them than just how they like to dance.
1Yes,
all these descriptions are very simplified, but really, you want to
read 500 words on Definitions of Economics terminology? Thought
not.