Eating alone as psychological self-care: How the younger generation in Let’s Eat survives in neoliberal South Korea

Hojin Song
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Abstract

TV dramas that focus on food and eating reflect the popular trend of single culture, with a rising number of single-person households among the younger generation in South Korea. Analyzing Let’s Eat (tvN), the South Korean food drama series that specifically focus on eating scenes, this paper uses the framework of survivalism and the popular discourse of healing to examine how eating alone as a social and cultural phenomenon represents the psychological turn in neoliberalism. In its three seasons, Let’s Eat reflects how eating alone becomes a practice of endurance and resilience that encourages the younger generation to stay positive, even during an enervated state of mind, to bounce back, and to ultimately spring forward. I argue that Let’s Eat reflects how survivalism especially requires the marginalized population of women in precarious employment to reflect and grow confidence without considering the problems of structural inequality. Let’s Eat shows the younger generation’s struggle and lack of societal support, perpetuating neoliberalism’s focus on individual effort and blaming individuals for their enervation.
独自吃饭作为心理上的自我照顾:《让我们吃吧》中的年轻一代如何在新自由主义的韩国生存
关注美食和饮食的电视剧反映了单身文化的流行趋势,韩国年轻一代中单身家庭的数量不断增加。本文通过分析韩国美食剧《让我们吃吧》(Let 's Eat, tvN),特别关注饮食场景,运用生存主义的框架和流行的治疗话语来研究独自吃饭作为一种社会和文化现象如何代表新自由主义的心理转向。在三季中,《我们一起吃》反映了独自吃饭如何成为一种耐力和韧性的练习,鼓励年轻一代保持积极,即使在精神萎靡的状态下,也要振作起来,最终向前冲。我认为,《让我们吃吧》反映了生存主义是如何特别要求从事不稳定工作的边缘化妇女群体在不考虑结构性不平等问题的情况下反思和增强信心的。Let 's Eat展示了年轻一代的挣扎和缺乏社会支持,延续了新自由主义对个人努力的关注,并将个人的无能归咎于个人。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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