• en
  • de


  • Korea’s Genera­ti­on Internship 4.0


    Joerg Markowitsch

    The TV series "Misaeng: Incomplete Life" gives deep insights into South-Korea's working world and the difficult transition to get there.

    Korea has re-written film history in 2020. The film ‘Parasite’ by Bong Joon-ho was the first foreign language film to win an Oscar for best film. Until then, most people didn’t think that this was possible, because even for out­stan­ding foreign language movies the “Foreign Oscar” was highest accolade. ‘Parasite’ is a bitterly angry cinematic criticism of the growing ine­qua­li­ty within Korean society: drama, horror, thriller, comedy, satire. Genre-breaking, inno­va­ti­ve, ingenious.

    Another unclas­si­fia­ble series picking up ine­qua­li­ty as a central theme is, ‘Misaeng: Incom­ple­te Life’ (Korea, 2014), which has won several awards and has been extremely suc­cess­ful in Korea. It tells the story of young Geu-rae’s unusual entry — and pro­gres­si­on — into a large inter­na­tio­nal retail group. So far dependent on odd jobs to keep himself and his mother afloat, the young ‘Go’-nerd somehow manages to hold his own against other interns in the group. He only holds a regular school leaving cer­ti­fi­ca­te, while all the other interns have diplomas from renowned uni­ver­si­ties.  He doesn’t speak English, all others speak several foreign languages fluently. The scene in the pilot film, for example, in which he is forced to asks his trainee colleague Young-yi non-verbally for help every time a customer calls him, because he doesn’t under­stand the inter­na­tio­nal callers, is very touchy. He literally drags her — without causing offense — to the phone, where she answers elo­quent­ly each time in a different foreign language.

    With his pro­noun­ced social com­pe­tence, he ulti­mate­ly succeeds in defying the super-hier­ar­chi­cal, ultra-discri­mi­na­to­ry and mega-com­pe­ti­ti­ve Korean office routine. When he, contrary to all expec­ta­ti­ons, is accepted into the sales team, you can even imagine yourself in a present-day movie fairy tale. However, as a whole the series is hard to classify: Social romance? Satire? Office comedy? Drama or docu­men­ta­ry? It’s a little bit of ever­ything, but in any case, a lot of insight into the recruit­ment practices and everyday madness of Korean companies is revealed. Those who are looking for illus­tra­ti­ve material of bullying by superiors, which is deeply rooted and accep­ta­ble in Korean everyday work culture, will find it here in every episode, dis­tur­bin­gly. Inci­dent­al­ly, the Koreans have invented for this purpose the neologism ‘Gapjil’ (the Japanese ‘Pawa-hara’ — from ‘Power Harr­as­se­ment’) and only recently passed a law against it.

    Refe­ren­ces:

    Misaeng: Incom­ple­te Life (2014), https://www.imdb.com/title/tt4240730/

     

    Misaeng: Incomplete Life (2014), Trailer 

    Promotion Picture

    Site picture, the young Geu-rae's (Im Si-wan)

    Tags

    Korea’s Genera­ti­on Internship 4.0

    Joerg Markowitsch

    The TV series "Misaeng: Incomplete Life" gives deep insights into South-Korea's working world and the difficult transition to get there.

    Korea has re-written film history in 2020. The film ‘Parasite’ by Bong Joon-ho was the first foreign language film to win an Oscar for best film. Until then, most people didn’t think that this was possible, because even for out­stan­ding foreign language movies the “Foreign Oscar” was highest accolade. ‘Parasite’ is a bitterly angry cinematic criticism of the growing ine­qua­li­ty within Korean society: drama, horror, thriller, comedy, satire. Genre-breaking, inno­va­ti­ve, ingenious.

    Another unclas­si­fia­ble series picking up ine­qua­li­ty as a central theme is, ‘Misaeng: Incom­ple­te Life’ (Korea, 2014), which has won several awards and has been extremely suc­cess­ful in Korea. It tells the story of young Geu-rae’s unusual entry — and pro­gres­si­on — into a large inter­na­tio­nal retail group. So far dependent on odd jobs to keep himself and his mother afloat, the young ‘Go’-nerd somehow manages to hold his own against other interns in the group. He only holds a regular school leaving cer­ti­fi­ca­te, while all the other interns have diplomas from renowned uni­ver­si­ties.  He doesn’t speak English, all others speak several foreign languages fluently. The scene in the pilot film, for example, in which he is forced to asks his trainee colleague Young-yi non-verbally for help every time a customer calls him, because he doesn’t under­stand the inter­na­tio­nal callers, is very touchy. He literally drags her — without causing offense — to the phone, where she answers elo­quent­ly each time in a different foreign language.

    With his pro­noun­ced social com­pe­tence, he ulti­mate­ly succeeds in defying the super-hier­ar­chi­cal, ultra-discri­mi­na­to­ry and mega-com­pe­ti­ti­ve Korean office routine. When he, contrary to all expec­ta­ti­ons, is accepted into the sales team, you can even imagine yourself in a present-day movie fairy tale. However, as a whole the series is hard to classify: Social romance? Satire? Office comedy? Drama or docu­men­ta­ry? It’s a little bit of ever­ything, but in any case, a lot of insight into the recruit­ment practices and everyday madness of Korean companies is revealed. Those who are looking for illus­tra­ti­ve material of bullying by superiors, which is deeply rooted and accep­ta­ble in Korean everyday work culture, will find it here in every episode, dis­tur­bin­gly. Inci­dent­al­ly, the Koreans have invented for this purpose the neologism ‘Gapjil’ (the Japanese ‘Pawa-hara’ — from ‘Power Harr­as­se­ment’) and only recently passed a law against it.

    Refe­ren­ces:

    Misaeng: Incom­ple­te Life (2014), https://www.imdb.com/title/tt4240730/

     

    Misaeng: Incomplete Life (2014), Trailer

    Promotion Picture

    Site picture, the young Geu-rae's (Im Si-wan)

    Tags


    Still, Lazzaro is happy

    Still, Lazzaro is happy

    Alice Rohrwacher's film about the dubious liberation from a relationship of subjection

    Gundermann: Swan song on a work paradigm

    Gun­der­mann: Swan song on a work paradigm

    The biopic 'Gundermann' (2018) reveals en passant the decline of open-cast mining in Lusatia and the fleeting work paradigm of the German Democratic Republic.

    Wittgenstein stop motion

    Witt­gen­stein stop motion

    Ana Vasof's cinematic anecdotes inspire praxeology and incisively question our ways of thinking and acting.

    Sorry, you missed your life!

    Sorry, you missed your life!

    Open exploitation can be combatted while subtle forms are not so easily recognizable and harder to fight.

    1 42 43 44 45 46 48