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  • Trends

    Blooming trumpet vines become symbol of Korean summer

    Neungsohwa, or trumpet vine, is emerging as a summer icon for young Koreans, who increasingly treat its blooming season as an experience to savor. Part of the trumpet creeper family, the plant produces clusters of large flowers in vivid shades of yellow and orange. It sends long, flexible stems up walls, fences and tree trunks, reaching heights of up to 10 meters. It typically blooms from July to September, peaking around August. Its blooms spill over theatrically, highlighting even small spaces and creating a sense of drama. The plant is hardy, tolerating heat, rain and wind, and has long been cultivated at homes and gardens around Korea. The flower’s recent popularity roots in its name and symbolism. The name of the flower can be translated as "insulting the sky." Essays have gone viral on social media playing with the idea of “laughing at” or “defying” the harsh summer sky, along with the season's monsoon rains, typhoons and oppressive heat. Old stories describe the flower as a sign of dignity and integrity even in decline, as its blossoms drop intact rather than scattering

    2 MIN READBy Lee Hae-rin
    Blooming trumpet vines become symbol of Korean summer
  • Lifestyle

    Why 'Wild Thing' viewers can't stop talking about Oh Jung-se over lead actor

    4 MIN READBy Hankookilbo
    Why 'Wild Thing' viewers can't stop talking about Oh Jung-se over lead actor
  • Lifestyle

    K-snacks sell nostalgia with tableware, hand warmers and storybooks

    3 MIN READBy Hankookilbo
    K-snacks sell nostalgia with tableware, hand warmers and storybooks
  • Arts & Theater

    Damien Hirst exhibition at MMCA attracts 540,000 visitors

    1 MIN READBy Yonhap
    Damien Hirst exhibition at MMCA attracts 540,000 visitors
  • People & Events

    Daegu sets stage for global push with chicken and beer festival lineup

    2 MIN READBy Lee Kyung-min
    Daegu sets stage for global push with chicken and beer festival lineup
  • Tech & Science

    KAIST appoints Bae Choong-sik as new president

    2 MIN READBy Nam Hyun-woo
    KAIST appoints Bae Choong-sik as new president
  • Korean Heritage

    Stitching Korean spirit: Costume designer reimagines hanbok for world stage

    5 MIN READBy Park Jin-hai
    Stitching Korean spirit: Costume designer reimagines hanbok for world stage
  • Korean Heritage

    Ancient royal banquets meet augmented reality in high tech airport exhibition

    2 MIN READBy Jhoo Dong-chan
    Ancient royal banquets meet augmented reality in high tech airport exhibition
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CEO & Publisher: Oh Young-jinDigital News Email: webmaster@koreatimes.co.krTel: 02-724-2114Online newspaper registration No: 서울,아52844Date of registration: 2020.02.05Masthead: The Korea TimesCopyright © koreatimes.co.kr. All rights reserved.

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People & Events

'Korea_Grandma' YouTuber cooks food for Thanksgiving with US embassy

YouTuber Park Mak-rye, right, and American Charge d'Affaires to Korea Chris Del Corso pose before cooking food for Thanksgiving at Habib House in central Seoul, Tuesday. / Captured from InstagramBy Lee Hae-rinElderly YouTuber Park Mak-rye, also known as “Korea_Grandma,” was invited by the U.S. Embassy, Tuesday, to cook food for Thanksgiving with U.S. Charge d'Affaires Chris Del Corso. Park and Del Corso cooked traditional Korean dishes “japchae” (stir-fried glass noodle) and “galbijjim” (braised beef short ribs) and shared traditional American dishes at Habib House, the residence for the U.S. ambassador to Korea in central Seoul, to celebrate Thanksgiving, according to the U.S. embassy and Park's Instgram.“She is a role model that demonstrates how vital it is that the voice of the elder generation is represented in the digital space. And she has such a huge influence on the young generation who are digital natives. We wanted to learn more about her stories so we could understand traditional Korean culture through her experience. And we wanted

Nov 25, 2021By Lee Hae-rin
'Korea_Grandma' YouTuber cooks food for Thanksgiving with US embassy
Arts & Theater

Exhibition becomes compact archive of intergenerational queer narratives

An original poster made by Hong Kong-born American photographer Tseng Kwong Chi from his 1980 Polaroid photo of ballet dancer Shawn McQuate is on display at artist Lee Kang-seung's solo exhibition, “Briefly Gorgeous,” at Gallery Hyundai. Korea Times photo by Park Han-solBy Park Han-solIn September 1980, Hong Kong-born American queer photographer Tseng Kwong Chi captured in a still image the mesmerizing presence of 19-year-old ballet dancer Shawn McQuate, who was active in New York's East Village countercultural scene during the 1980s.Now, four decades later, Tseng, as well as McQuate's artist colleagues, are long gone, after succumbing to HIV/AIDS-related illnesses. McQuate himself, one of the few survivors, became legally blind due to similar complications.Such specific stories and figures of sexual and ethnic minorities stuck in the crevices of the mainstream historical narrative are where Seoul-born artist Lee Kang-seung's focus lies.Like an avid historian, Lee spends a tremendous amount of time delving into both public archives and private recollections related to or

Nov 25, 2021By Park Han-sol
Exhibition becomes compact archive of intergenerational queer narratives
People & Events

Korea Times receives 'Video Storytelling Award' for Nth room documentary

By Hwang Dong-heeThe Korea Times video team received a “Video Storytelling Award” at the 10th Korea Digital Journalism Awards, Wednesday, for the documentary film “The Nth Room case: The Making of a Monster.”The film covers the notorious online sexual blackmail ring case which shocked the nation last year as a string of appalling cases of sexual exploitation crimes that were committed through chatroom groups of the Telegram messaging platform, particularly the group named 'Nth room,' were revealed.From Oct. 2020 to May 2021, The Korea Times' video journalists collaborated with Hong Kong's South China Morning Post, Indonesia's Tempo magazine, the Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism (PCIJ), and Manila-based broadcasting company ABS-CBN to cover the issues of digital sex crimes in Asia.In addition to reporting cases of digital sexual violence in each institution's respective country, the media organizations jointly cooperated to cover similar patterns of sexual exploitation that cross national borders in the digital space, highlighting the need for int

Nov 24, 2021
Korea Times receives 'Video Storytelling Award' for Nth room documentary
  • ASIAN STORIES Digital sex crime in Asia: Nth room, the making of a monster
Books

Related images Pandemic can't stop literary passion

By Kang Hyun-kyungDue to her extremely busy academic schedule, Min Eun-kyung, a professor at Seoul National University and one of three judges of The Korea Times Modern Literature Awards, initially planned to just drop by the award ceremony held at the Lotte Hotel in central Seoul, Wednesday, to say hello to the participants. But she chose to stay until the very end of the ceremony, and even had lunch with other attendees afterward. Asked why she decided to stay until the end of the event, the soft-spoken English literature professor said she was so touched by the literature-loving people who had gathered there. “I am struggling managing my time these days because there are so many things to do, but here I got comfort. I'm glad to know that there are still people who are in love with literature,” she said. “I'm relieved.” Novelist Lee Jung-myung reads The Korea Times during the 52nd Korea Times Modern Literature Translation Awards at the Lotte Hotel in central Seoul, Wednesday. He later read an excerpt of his latest book “Broken Summer.” Korea Time

Nov 24, 2021By Kang Hyun-kyung
[Related images] Pandemic can't stop literary passion
  • Future of literary translation addressed during Korea Times award ceremony
People & Events

Future of literary translation addressed during Korea Times award ceremony

Participants in the 52nd Modern Korean Literature Translation Awards pose during a ceremony at the Lotte Hotel in central Seoul, Wednesday. From left are Korea Times President-Publisher Oh Young-jin; Park Tae-young, deputy minister for culture and art policy; judge Jung Ha-yun, a professor from Ewha Womans University; Poetry Grand Prize Winner Joanne Park; Fiction Grand Prize Winner Youngjae Joesphine Bae; judge Brother Anthony, professor emeritus at Sogang University; judge Min Eun-kyung, a professor at Seoul National University; and Lee Woo-yeul, senior executive vice president and chief human resource officer at KB Financial Group. Korea Times photo by Choi Won-sukStar author Lee Jung-myung reads an excerpt from his latest bestseller 'Broken Summer'By Kwak Yeon-sooA winner of the 52nd Korea Times Modern Korean Literature Translation Awards took on the issue of humans vs. artificial intelligence (AI) in translation, Wednesday, sparking an intellectual debate about whether machines can replace humans in literary translation. Joanne Park, who won the Grand Prize in poetry for her tra

Nov 24, 2021By Kwak Yeon-soo
Future of literary translation addressed during Korea Times award ceremony
  • Related images Pandemic can't stop literary passion
Trends

Architect designs shared spaces to grow concept of 'village'

Architect Lee Jun-hyung, leader of The Project HUAM, which creates expansive shared spaces in Huam-dong, an area in Seoul's Yongsan District, poses in front of a townhouse space, which houses a cafe and a living room, Tuesday. Korea Times photo by Jung Da-minBy Jung Da-min According to a biennial report on living conditions by the Seoul Metropolitan Government released in late April, a third of the households in Seoul are single-person ones. For those living alone, having a larger living space is a luxury, and as such, most of those people live in relatively small studio-style spaces. To improve the quality of life for these people in their downtime, architect Lee Jun-hyung, 37, has launched “The Project HUAM,” which creates expansive shared spaces ― such as kitchens, living rooms or other private spaces ― in Huam-dong, an area in Seoul's Yongsan District.Since launching the project with the opening of Huam Kitchen as the first shared space in 2016, The Huam Project is currently operating multiple spaces, including a kitchen space, a library space, a living room space, an

Nov 24, 2021
Architect designs shared spaces to grow concept of 'village'
Others

DAILY FORTUNE - NOVEMBER 25, 2021

Nov 24, 2021
DAILY FORTUNE - NOVEMBER 25, 2021
People & Events

Church of God members win Int'l environmental awards

Green Organization CEO Roger Wolens, center, encourages ASEZ through supporting signature. Courtesy of Church of GodBy Kim Ok-kyung The World Mission Society of the Church of God, led by General Pastor Kim Joo-cheol, has received international environmental awards. On Nov. 22, the church said that its university student volunteer group “ASEZ” and its young adult volunteer group “ASEZ WAO” were honored with the Green Apple Award and the Green World Award, respectively. These awards are officially recognized by the European Union and the United Kingdom's Environment Agency. In 2018, the Church of God and ASEZ received the Gold and Bronze Green Apple Awards, respectively. With this year's recognition, the environmental protection initiatives they have been carrying out are again in the spotlight. The Green Organisation, an international non-profit group, recognizes and awards excellent cases of environmental best practices. The organization launched the Green Apple Awards in 1994 and have now offer the Green World Awards as well. Committee members in relevant are

Nov 24, 2021
Church of God members win Int'l environmental awards
Arts & Theater

Korea's iconic theatrical show 'Nanta' set to return

The actors in “Nanta,” a non-verbal, cooking-themed, percussive performance, display their talents in the show's theater in Myeong-dong, Seoul, Nov. 18. Korea Times photo by Choi Won-sukBy Park Ji-wonWearing sweatpants, five performers gathered together for the first time in 21 months, in an empty theater in Myeong-dong, Seoul, designed especially for “Nanta,” a non-verbal, cooking-themed, percussive, theatrical performance.Premiering in October 1997 and based on the rhythms of samulnori, a type of percussion performance involving four traditional Korean instruments, “Nanta” revolves around four chefs, who, using their cooking tools as percussive instruments prepare food for a traditional wedding ceremony. With the tools, they make sounds by chopping vegetables, as well as fighting with brooms and throwing dishes at each other to create a percussive maelstrom.The five ― Choi Hye-in, playing “Female,” Sul Ho-yeoul, playing “Manager,” Ko Chang-hwan, playing “Head Chef,” Jung Min-goo, playing “Sexy Guy”

Nov 24, 2021By Park Ji-won
Korea's iconic theatrical show 'Nanta' set to return
Others

DAILY FORTUNE - NOVEMBER 24, 2021

Nov 23, 2021
DAILY FORTUNE - NOVEMBER 24, 2021
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