KCCNYC MONTHLY
Our Monthly Blog Covering Korean Culture, History, Current Events And Art
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VOICES OF KCCNYC ADOPTEES: MATTHEW’S STORY
By Matthew Faulkner
My name is Matthew Faulkner, or my Korean name, 오은수 O Eun Su. I was adopted from Seoul, South Korea on August 26, 1988. I was always asked about my adoption story when I was a kid and I would say that it depends if I wanted to search for my birth mother or not. Internally, I was thinking she probably did not care about me. However, I was very fortunate to be given my birth mother’s name and her age at the time she had me. My sister was not so fortunate and she was not given anything. It amazes me, in a 7-year time span, how much information I had versus what she had.
KOREAN FOLKLORE CORNER - NOV. 2024
By Joshua Kim
This month we celebrate you, the Korean adoptees. You who have been through so much, so much to find your homes amidst challenges that others couldn’t imagine. In this vein of “home”, I picked a poem to share this month from New Orleans based Korean Adoptee writer Tiana Nobile.
ADOPTEE THEMES IN K-DRAMAS AND FILMS - NOV. 2024
By Sharon Stern
This month in the newsletter we are focusing on the stories of Korean adoptees. Both K-dramas and Korean films frequently touch this subject, but often in very different ways. Read about how both K-dramas and films approach the subject of South Korean adoption.
THIS MONTH IN THE KOREAN ADOPTEE COMMUNITY-NOV. 2024
By Jon Oaks
National Adoption Awareness Month, observed each November, shines a light on the importance of adoption and the unique experiences of adoptees and their families. While it is often a time for awareness campaigns and celebrating the connections formed through adoption, it also serves as an opportunity to explore the complexities of adoption and advocate for adoptee voices in shaping the conversation.
KOREAN COMMUNITY NEWS - NOV. 2024
By Amalia Tempel
Kristen Kish, a renowned Korean adoptee top chef, attributes part of her drive to success to her feelings of abandonment from her birth parents. Read about Kish’s life and career.
K-DRAMA NEWS - NOV. 2024
By Sharon Stern
Premiering K-dramas this month range from cute and silly fluff to revenge, action, mystery with some crime and law thrown in. The rom-com, dram-com, melodramas and crime/mystery will most likely offer what one would expect from those genres. There are a couple of stand outs for their oddities and quirks. Face Me offers a very strange pairing for crime-solving dramas and Mr. Plankton looks downright quirky, but fun. With interesting story twists and star-studded casts, there is something here for everyone.
THIS MONTH IN KOREAN HISTORY - NOV. 2024
By Eun Byoul Oh
In November, we highlight the airing of Finding Dispersed Families. Finding Dispersed Families was a marathon, live broadcast on KBS 1TV that lasted from June 30 to November 14, 1983.
VOICES OF KCCNYC ADOPTEES
For National Adoption Awareness Month, KCCNYC asked members of our community to share their personal essays about their experience as Korean American Adoptees or as a parent of an adoptee. We hope you will spend time with each story, helping us to more deeply understand the experiences of adoptees. We are profoundly honored to share these with our readers.
LETTER FROM THE EDITOR - VOL. 5
For October, we are happy to share the news of Han Kang winning the 2024 Nobel Prize in Literature. The Nobel Prize committee states it nominated Han Kang’s literature “for her intense poetic prose that confronts historical traumas and exposes the fragility of human life.” We also want to pause to celebrate both National Foundation Day and Hangul Day. Both of these holidays focus on pieces of the rich history that make up the culture of the Korean people.
SPECIAL NOTE: HAN KANG’S NOBEL PRIZE IN LITERATURE
As we discussed in our Editor’s note, we are thrilled to hear the news that Han Kang was selected as the Nobel Prize winner for Literature in 2024. Her achievement is received as a victory for many sectors of minorities in South Korea.
As The New York Times recognized, her Nobel Prize showcases “another validation of the outsize soft power of the South Korean cultural juggernaut.” However, it should be noted with emphasis that she is a female writer who writes about past traumas of Korea.
KOREAN COMMUNITY NEWS - OCT. 2024
Through October 20th, 2024, the Metropolitan Museum of Art hosted the exhibition “Lineages: Korean Art at the MET.” Despite being a smaller exhibition compared to others that the museum displays. Lineages featured a diverse display of Korean art ranging from traditional ceramic pieces from the early 12th century to statement pieces commenting on South Korea’s political landscape of the late 1980s.
THIS MONTH IN THE KOREAN ADOPTEE COMMUNITY - OCT 2024
For Korean adoptees, cultural holidays such as Hangul Day and National Foundation Day can take on a deeper meaning, as they reconnect with their heritage and identity. These two important Korean holidays provide adoptees with opportunities to engage with significant aspects of Korean history and culture, allowing them to explore their roots in meaningful ways.
K-MUSIC PLAYLIST No. 4
KCCNYC Mix No 4: 할로윈 파티 HALLOWEEN PARTY: This month our playlist is a collection of spooky, and sensual K-Pop to help soundtrack your Halloween party + music videos to get you in a spooooky mood!
K-DRAMA NEWS - OCT. 2024
The diversity represented in this month’s new k-dramas is pretty stunning. We have a musical history lesson; women in a small town selling sex toys door-to-door; a mainstream drama with gay main characters; a tiny, silly spin-off; a couple of dramas examining the definition of family; a couple of crime dramas where the main character challenges their instincts and a sequel horror story. Wow.
KOREAN FOLKORE CORNER - oct. 2024
October deserves a spooky story and we’re telling an eerie one called Green Onion or The Man Who Planted Onions. It’s also the first story in a new book called “Korean Folktales” by Kim So-un and Frances Carpenter, being released Oct. 29. Pick it up online or at your local bookstore!
We’re in a land where the people have never seen an onion before. In this land, the people actually eat… other people. That’s because the people have a disease where they see other people as cows and can’t tell the difference between the two.