While Julianne and I were eating lunch in a major department store's food court we suddenly noticed this girlfriend popping her boyfriend's zits . . . and just when we thought it couldn't get any worse she picks up two TOOTH PICKS and finishes the job.
NOTE: This may have nothing to do with 'couplehood' culture in Korea. It may be more about individual personality traits and relationship eccentricities . . .
BUT SERIOUSLY! Pop your zits in private!
PLEASE!
J
BUT SERIOUSLY! Pop your zits in private!
PLEASE!
J
True, blessed love in action.
ReplyDeleteI've seen this before a couple of times on the subway, and I admit that some things are better done in privacy. However, I find it even more distasteful that you have posted a video of them on the Internet.
ReplyDeleteHi Cassandra,
ReplyDeleteIf you're in a public space, displaying behavior to such a degree that you disregard others in the same space, without regard for the two-way flow of existence within a public space you open yourself up to being recorded and represented within that space . ..
If you took a very different view of the video you might consider that it could be a counter-discourse against my views on public displays of intimate interaction within the arbitrary construction of social space within which the couple is disrupting the normative behavioral codes of behavior . ..
Either way, they get to display behavior that they must on some level know they have made a CHOICE to display . ..
Please don't misunderstand my intentions here: I WANT to encourage a dialogue about what is 'appropriate' and or otherwise in public spaces and WHY . . .
J
Hi Jason,
ReplyDeleteHypothetical question.
If a Korean took a picture of you doing something to be deemed inappropriate by the general Korean public (e.g. kissing your girlfriend on a busy street), how would you feel if they then posted that image on a public forum under the heading of 'the horror, the horror'?
Just curious.
I get what you're saying about people opening themselves up to be recorded, but I find it a bit disrespectful to do so.
As I said in my previous comment, I have seen girlfriends openly popping their boyfriends' spots on the subway. I've seen a girl picking her boyfriend's nose in public. Friends have also told me stories along the same lines. Maybe it is a trait of Korean 'couplehood'. It's not that pleasant to watch, I agree, but neither are the full-on displays of public affection, which seem to be accepted in my home country. Cultural differences fascinate me.
Anyway, I enjoy reading your blog (particularly loved the post entitled Cell Phone Etiquette 101), and have picked up some good tips for new things to try in Seoul. I apologise if my wording was a bit harsh in my first comment; I didn't mean it to sound so blunt. :)
Hi Cassandra,
ReplyDeleteI've had Koreans take my photo MANY times without asking my permission, and had them VIDEO me too, again without asking my permission . . . this has happened when I've been teaching, when I've been on the street, etc.
If I'm doing something that the majority of people in a culture would consider taboo, and it's in a highly trafficked public space . . . I have to be prepared to be filmed doing it.
"the horror, the horror" is meant to be rather tongue in cheek--and regular readers of my blog would understand that, I think. Also, people who know the literary allusion would also get my mild commentary on the phenomenon that is couplehood in Korea's modernity . . .
Anyways . . . I made sure that the couple's faces were not visible, and feel that that was more than fair considering what they were doing in the FOOD COURT of a major department store.
J