30page
Outside of the workplace Outside of work, black people report diffi- culty getting taxis, even when Koreans and  whites get them on the same street. Some  say cab drivers go so far as to make illegal  U-turns into traffic to avoid picking up black  passengers. Some Koreans will refuse to get  into elevators with black people, and will often  change subway cars to avoid being near black  passengers. Ashby tells of one night out with a group of  foreign and Korean friends. “There was this  one Korean girl, she was in her early twen- ties,” he says. “We’d only been talking for  maybe two minutes … and she says, ‘The way  you speak is very intelligent. And you’re very  nice.’” Then she said, “‘Not like most black  guys.’ I said, ‘What do you mean?’ And she  said, ‘You know. Not like black-black guys.’” One black woman told Ashby that a Kore- an had said she was “so beautiful” that she  couldn’t possibly be fully African-American —  “‘because most (black) girls only have a mon- key face,’ she said.” John (not his real name), 26, from Ghana,  feels that people from Africa get it even harder  than black Americans, and is upset that Afri- cans are often viewed as stupid and primitive. “A lot of (Koreans) are really ignorant about  what we have in Africa,” says John, a graduate  student in the Advanced Information Sciences  and Information Technology Program at Pu- kyong National University. “They find it weird  that we actually speak English, and they won- der how we even got here. When they get to  know that I’m on a scholarship, they’re like,  ‘Wow!’” He says he often comes across Ko- reans who don’t realize there are even com- puters in Africa, much less centers to train  computer specialists like himself. John says he and his friends are sometimes  barred from public places like bars and clubs.  He says he has learned that “no foreigners al- lowed” can often mean no black foreigners are  allowed, while white people can enter just fine.  Lining up at one nightclub, two of his white  friends walked into the club, paid their 10,000  won and got wristbands. He was outside tak- ing a phone call, but when he showed up, the  bouncer said foreigners were not allowed. “So  I’m thinking, ‘How can you sell (tickets) to the  first two people, the guy from Finland and the  guy from Spain, but the moment I show up,  say ‘No foreigners allowed’? So, is this be- cause of me being black, or because there  are no foreigners allowed?” And it was not an  isolated incident for him. “Being an African here sometimes, it’s tir- ing,” John says. For many blacks, getting questions like “Do  you have a gun?” or “How many guns do you  own?” are common.  Blogger Michael Hurt, 41, says there is a  sentiment that “black people are low, stupid,  crass, dangerous” and even scary. “I would go around the corner and people  would literally jump,” Hurt says. He says peo- ple who are now his friends would say to him,  “When I first met you, I was so scared of you!”  Hurt, who is half-black and half-Korean, ad- mits he has a wider build, but that’s not the  only reason people are afraid. He says he has  white friends who are also big guys, but peo- ple don’t freak out when they see them in the  community.  One smartphone-recorded video that went  viral on Korean and English media in 2011  showed a black teacher assaulting an elder- ly Korean couple on a bus, yelling, “You see  these rocks?” and shaking his fist at the old  man. He had reportedly mistaken “ni-ga” —  “you” in Korean — for racial profanity.  While many condemned the teacher for fur- ther damaging black expats’ reputation, Hurt  said the incident highlighted the absence of  dialogue on anti-black racism here. “Well, there we saw it — an angry black  man, yelling and scaring … everybody. Surely  he just got up and started attacking people for  no apparent reason, because that’s what scary  black men do, right?” Hurt had written on his  blog, which was quoted by the Los Angeles  Times. “Never has there been a discussion, in  general, of the fact that black folks like myself  get harassed daily on subways and buses and  trains, but that never becomes an issue; no  Korean thinks to flip on their cell phone to start  making YouTube videos (of racism against  blacks). I don’t condone this young man’s type  of behavior. But I understand it.” Monkeys, blackface  and watermelon Media critics have not yet pinpointed the  first appearance of black people in the Korean  media, but prior to the 1980s, the images of  black culture that became familiar to Koreans  were of slaves, poor people or tribal Africans,  according to Loyola-Marymount sociology  professor Nadia Kim. From the 1980s, the  media image became more sinister, with a  greater focus on black criminality, violence and  drug use. This was derived from a mix of both  Korean and American media. Media portrayals of blacks can range from  professional and benign to ignorant and  “shockingly racially offensive,” as pointed out  by celebrity blog Oh No They Didn’t. It dubs  K-pop as “KKK-pop,” given the slew of acts  that have been caught in blackface or mak- ing racist remarks. Big Bang’s Taeyang, for  instance, called his friend “Ma NiggA” on an  online forum. After getting into the wrong van  on a U.S. tour, his fellow boy band member  Seungri said he was relieved the van’s owners  were white, because if they had been black,  he might have been shot. Meanwhile, Girls’  Generation member Taeyeon put her foot in it  when she said Alicia Keys was pretty — “for a  black girl.” Her fellow girl group member Yuri  was asked to “act black” on KBS’ “Invincible  Youth.” She complied by rolling her neck, run- ning her finger across her throat and yelling,  “Yo! You die!” In November 2013, Miss A’s  Min was lambasted when she Photoshopped  a picture of American rapper Rick Ross’ head  onto a female rapper’s body, crawling toward  an image of fried chicken, The Korea Times  reported.  Koreans also began copying American  blackface theater. Matt VanVolkenburg, who  runs the public opinion blog Gusts of Popular  Feeling, has traced references to blackface  back to a 1978 play. Blackface gained popu- larity in the U.S. through vaudeville in the 19th  century, though it wasn’t until 1986 when it  became associated with comedy in Korea,  with TV’s popular “sikeomeonseu” routine. It  was stopped before the Olympics for fear of  upsetting African athletes, but blackface re- emerged in force in 2003 with the Bubble Sis- www.groovekorea.com / February 2014 30 Edited by Elaine Ramirez (elaine@groovekorea.com) InsIGhT