Local cover image
Local cover image
Normal view

Critically capitalist : the spirit of asset capitalism in South Korea / Bohyeong Kim.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Perspectives on contemporary KoreaPublisher: Ann Arbor [Michigan] : University of Michigan Press, 2025Description: 1 online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780472904877
  • 9780472057269
Subject(s): Genre/Form: LOC classification:
  • HG5780.5.A3
Online resources:
Contents:
Chapter 1. Introduction to Critical Capitalism.-- Chapter 2: The Entrepreneurial Communitarianism of Aspiring Millionaires.-- Chapter 3: Anti-Capitalist Investing.-- Chapter 4. Emotional Wounds.-- Chapter 5. Flipping Homes, Flipping Victimhood: The Social Reproduction of Foreclosure Investors.-- Chapter 6: Single and Wanna Be Rich.
Summary: Critically Capitalist presents an ethnography of South Korea's asset seekers, including amateur stock investors, real estate enthusiasts, and money coaches, to demonstrate how financialized asset capitalism is sustained. As they hunt for profit margins, rent, and dividends, they simultaneously critique capitalism and posit their pursuit of assets as a form of resistance. Bohyeong Kim theorizes this new spirit of capitalism in South Korea as "critical capitalism," arguing that it reflects the popular discontent with both national development and financial neoliberalism. As a paradoxical critique and legitimation, Bohyeong Kim argues that critical capitalism valorizes the capitalist economy not through a triumphant narrative, but by highlighting the emotional wounds, destroyed communities, and oppressive tactics of modern capitalism. Drawing on multi-sited ethnography and in-depth interviews with a broad community of aspiring millionaires, Critically Capitalist illuminates how contemporary capitalism thrives by channeling discontent into financial and real estate markets, which in turn, has cemented critical capitalism as the cultural and affective backbone of South Korea's economy.
List(s) this item appears in: Electronic Books | الكتب الإلكترونية
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number URL Status Date due Barcode
Online Resource Online Resource UAE Federation Library | مكتبة اتحاد الإمارات Online Copy | نسخة إلكترونية Link to resource Not for loan

Includes bibliographical references (pages [163]-181) and index.

Chapter 1. Introduction to Critical Capitalism.-- Chapter 2: The Entrepreneurial Communitarianism of Aspiring Millionaires.-- Chapter 3: Anti-Capitalist Investing.-- Chapter 4. Emotional Wounds.-- Chapter 5. Flipping Homes, Flipping Victimhood: The Social Reproduction of Foreclosure Investors.-- Chapter 6: Single and Wanna Be Rich.

Critically Capitalist presents an ethnography of South Korea's asset seekers, including amateur stock investors, real estate enthusiasts, and money coaches, to demonstrate how financialized asset capitalism is sustained. As they hunt for profit margins, rent, and dividends, they simultaneously critique capitalism and posit their pursuit of assets as a form of resistance. Bohyeong Kim theorizes this new spirit of capitalism in South Korea as "critical capitalism," arguing that it reflects the popular discontent with both national development and financial neoliberalism. As a paradoxical critique and legitimation, Bohyeong Kim argues that critical capitalism valorizes the capitalist economy not through a triumphant narrative, but by highlighting the emotional wounds, destroyed communities, and oppressive tactics of modern capitalism. Drawing on multi-sited ethnography and in-depth interviews with a broad community of aspiring millionaires, Critically Capitalist illuminates how contemporary capitalism thrives by channeling discontent into financial and real estate markets, which in turn, has cemented critical capitalism as the cultural and affective backbone of South Korea's economy.

Click on an image to view it in the image viewer

Local cover image
Share

Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates

reference@ecssr.ae

+97124044780

Copyright © 2024 Emirates Center for Strategic Studies and Research All Rights Reserved