Tài liệu hạn chế xem trước, để xem đầy đủ mời bạn chọn Tải xuống
1
/ 16 trang
THÔNG TIN TÀI LIỆU
Thông tin cơ bản
Định dạng
Số trang
16
Dung lượng
1,71 MB
Nội dung
IMAGINED COMMUNITY: A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF K-POP COVER DANCE AMONG YOUTH IN VIETNAM AND INDONESIA Phan Thanh Thanh This research demonstrates how K-pop cover dance practices have been articulated and used to expand youth self-identity in Vietnam and Indonesia beyond the nation state through cultural connectivity Through the cultural connectivity, I argue that studying this form of youth culture will lead to a greater understanding of the social meanings and relationships created among the groups, and will also help contribute to a greater level of understanding of space as a constructed and imagined entity, as well as the role K-pop cover acts can play in mediating this construction The regional collective of ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) plus its permutations, which is most commonly conceived of as ASEAN +3 (China, Japan, Korea), effectively ties Southeast and East Asia together in a common region with shared economic trade, political coordination, and cultural influence My argument suggests that even Southeast Asia more often finds itself the recipient rather than that of the donor of cultural flows as the latter region (East Asia), ASEAN countries including Vietnam, Indonesia and Thailand are also developing beyond the cultural global forces to remake their culture on their own rights at the local level While American popular culture still dominates many media forms, the media ties between East and Southeast Asian nations are arguably creating a “pan-East Asian identity,” particularly in regards to middle class urban representation (Chua 2004), what Lim (2008: 45) refers to as a “taste continent” of imagined East Asian identity K-pop cover dance is used as a tool to redefine Asia as an urban, imagined space, one containing cosmopolitan consumers This study is based on qualitative research with in depth interviews and close participation in everyday activities of the groups named YG Lovers Crew with its 12 official members from 18 to 23 years, St319 with its 20 official members from 15 to 25 years old, plus a Vietnamese Thai drama fan in Hanoi; I-Generation with members from 22 to 26 years old, plus an Indonesian Korean drama fan in Jakarta It addresses the following questions: How young people (teenagers) from Vietnam and Indonesia form themselves in social space to contest their youth identity to be both Vietnamese/Indonesian and K-Pop fans Hence, in my research, I propose to study those cover dance groups from the approach of fan culture, emphasizing youth perspectives in relation to both the nation-state and the global cultural capital K-Pop Cover Dance Cover dance (such as the K-Pop Cover Dance) is the imitation of the dance choreography of the original bands; together with cover the gestures and the customs of the original videos This makes the audience have the feeling that they are watching the real MVs or the real concerts Because of covering the dance movements, the realness of steps, gestures, and timing are highly appreciated as fidelity to the original movement is emphasized (Kang 2012) Large Korean media agencies organize and run global K-pop cover contests, disseminating details about these contests via You Tube and the internet (Kim 2012) Generation Y In this study I focus on the group of Youth generation “Y” According to the Pew Research Center Poll in 2010, the term “Generation Y” includes people who born between 1980 and 1996 while other groups “Generation X”; “Baby Boomers”; “The Silent Generation” covers those who born from 1965 and 1979; 1946 and 1964 and 1928 to 1945 respectively Following this definition, all members from mentioned groups from both Vietnam and Indonesia belong to the generation Y Moreover, the Pew poll was conducted globally in response to the question: What values make a generation unique? There were five key values identified by Generation Y respondents, namely: technology use, music culture, liberalism, smart and clothes, while two values were totally absent from the Generation X group: music culture and clothes (Pewinternet.org 2010) Cultural media flows According to Iwabuchi (2002) in non-Western countries, the USA has long been closely associated with images of modernity such as of romance, freedom and affluence However, over the past twenty years, the diverse movement and dynamics of the international flows of images and ideas around the globe has expanded within media flows This has occurred at a time when the political, economic and technological contexts within which media organizations operate have become increasingly global in scope and scale As a result, media scholars have begun to pay attention to various global media flows, among multiple countries, which not only include the “dominant flows” coming from the US-led Western media, but also the contra-flows coming from Bollywood, the Latin American telenovelas and the geo-cultural media flows of the pan-Arabic entertainment network (Iwabuchi 2002, Thussu 2007) Since the late 1990s South Korea has emerged as a new center for the production of transnational popular culture, exporting its own media products into Asian countries (Kim 2007) Korean pop music which is part of South Korean popular culture is considered as a common experience for communities who never actually meet This also helps contribute to a greater level of understanding of space as a constructed and imagined entity The role K-pop cover dance in Asia and ASEAN countries can play in mediating this construction and is used as a tool to re-define Asia and ASEAN as an urban, imagined space, one containing cosmopolitan consumers I apply the term “cultural capital” to explain the cultural practice of K-pop cover dance in Vietnam and Indonesia For Bourdieu, “cultural capital” acts as a social relation within a system of accumulated cultural knowledge, such as education, intellect, style of speech, dress or physical appearance that confers power and status Bourdieu’s central innovation (1984) was to coin the concept of “cultural capital”, which he used with the more familiar idea of economic capital Cultural capital, like economic capital, is a resource to be drawn upon in the pursuit of power Cultural capital is not secondary to economic capital, as each is exchangeable and important in different contexts (cited in Harker, 1990, p.13) One prominent implication of Bourdieu’s work is that the power of a variety of groups may be based on different capitals This term is useful to understand a variety of K-pop cover dance groups in Ha Noi and Jakarta; to understand how the cultural capital that K-pop cover dancers gain, is turned into economic capital, and how the groups use their economic capital to attain a higher level of cultural capital The groups selected for the research examination wereSt.319 (Saint 319) and YGLC (YG Lovers Crew) from Hanoi, Vietnam and I-Generation (Indonesian Generation) from Jakarta, Indonesia, who have made use of K-pop Global Cover Contests and social internet sites such as You Tube and Facebook to display their hybrid identity and leverage their social status as middle class young people in their countries in particular and in the region and globe in general YG Lovers Crew and St319 from Vietnam In Vietnam, a number of groups perform K-pop dance music, mostly in the big cities such as Ha Noi, Ho Chi Minh City and Hai Phong In total, there are about 20 such groups, but the number varies a lot, and there are many small and little known groups at local high schools and universities, and also fan club dance cover groups all over the country In Hanoi, the most famous groups are St.319, LYNT and YGLC, and they faced strong competition at the beginning in 2011 YG Lovers Crew and St319 were the groups studied for this research While the groups above still remain, St.319 is an example of the most successful K-pop cover group in Vietnam and well-known internationally on YouTube as its fan base outnumbers other groups It is known among the international K-pop fan community The group even has a higher ambition to become a local entertainment group targeting different areas besides being a K-pop cover group YG Lovers Crew is also a dance group based in Hanoi formed as part of the K-pop Global Contest celebrated by Korean music industries Currently, they perform many different kinds of dance genres besides K-pop cover dance, such as Hip Hop, modern dance The reason for them to cover K-pop dance is not only because of their love to K-pop and Korean artists but also to be well-known in the fan community and to contribute to the entertainment industry of Vietnam Figure YGLC (on the left) and St.319 (on the right) in Hanoi, Vietnam (Photos by YGLC and St319 groups) I-Generation from Indonesia With nine members (three males, six females) aged from 20 to 26, I-Generation from Indonesia cover all hits of “Girl Generation”-a K-Pop band from South Korea The group is the winner of the contest “K-Pop Festival in Kangwan Korea in 2013” In the future the group wants to build up their fame and cultivate more fan base The first reason for them to dance cover is because of their love for K-Pop, secondly, they want to improve K-pop cover competitiveness and standard in Indonesia since according to them K-pop cover in Indonesia is not very strong and popular They also want to use their awards to persuade their Government to support them and recognize K-pop cover dance as a kind of sport activities in Indonesia Lastly, they want to let other countries know about K-pop cover in Indonesia This is important as an avenue for connectivity in the region Figure 2.I-Generation (a K-pop cover dance group from Jakarta, Indonesia) is performing at Kangwan, South Korea in 2013 (Photo by I-Generation) Figure 3.Author and I-Generation in Jakarta, May 2014 Transnational flow of K-pop in Vietnam and Indonesia After the Vietnam War in 1975 and after Doi Moi in 1986, there were relatively poor sources of music domestically because most Vietnamese popular music was still old style, from the war when it was used as Viet Minh propaganda, or songs describing the beauty of the nation via both national TV channels and loa Phường (district public radio).Many, mostly urban Vietnamese living in Vietnam tried to consume different music products made by Vietnamese overseas who moved out of the country after the Vietnam War via video tapes The most famous overseas music company at that time was ‘Thuy Nga Paris’ This company released both old Vietnamese Diaspora songs from the South of Vietnam (Saigon) during war time, parodies of US/UK-pop songs, parodies of Hong Kong songs and some original English language songs (Cunningham & Nguyen 1999) Melodies of many famous American pop songs, Hong Kong and Chinese songs were copied for Vietnamese pop songs by the overseas Vietnamese Sometimes, the meanings of the songs in Vietnamese were totally different from the originals There seems to be a general desire to consume modern, global music (US/UK-pop which is referred to Western-led American pop music) with famous names such as MLTR, Boyzone, The Backstreet Boys and Britney Spears appearing in the 1990s via Vietnamese National Television and via cheap CDs and DVDs After that, the Korean cultural flow became popular in Vietnam around the late 1990s (with Korean drama) on Vietnamese television and at the beginning of the 2000s (with Korean pop music) together with the emerging of the internet The Vietnamese Government’s apparent attitude toward Korean culture has influenced its reception in Vietnam Thomas Mandy in 2004 argued that the enjoyment of East Asian (specifically Korean) cultural productions in Vietnam might be viewed as a way in which people resist and negotiate with the regime due to this new post-communist media revolution Moreover, there is also a competition in the domestic music market for external cultural influences, because the State realizes that local programs not meet the needs of consumers However, this represents a rich and creative area for Vietnamese artists to move into; to develop new themes, from the old nationalistic and patriotic theme (based on war and propaganda songs), to a new material pop culture (Thomas 2004) The reason Vietnamese consumers have greater choice in terms of consuming international cultural products is because the country has opened its markets and entered the world economy According to the World Bank, the GDP of Vietnam in the three years from Thuy Nga Production is the largest and most successful music company in HaiNgoai, particularly in the USA since 1980s, with their products including live shows, CDs, audio cassettes and karaoke discs The founder and leader of Thuy Nga is To Van Lai, a university psychology professor who wants to bring Vietnamese traditional folk together with contemporary Vietnamese music, and also using popular world pop music such as rock and pop (Cunningham & Nguyen 1999) 1985 to 1987 rose from 14,094,688,428 US$, to 26,336,617,864 US$ and on to 36,658,108,169US$ respectively, and after Doi Moi in 1986, GDP was almost double that of the previous year (www.Worldbank.org 2014a) After that, the Vietnamese economy gradually and stably increased, and in 2013 the country’s GDP was 171,391,820,360 US$, almost seven times that in 1986, and high enough to rank Vietnam as a lower-middle income country (www.worldbank.org 2014a) Vietnam’s poverty rate has also dropped, from almost 60% in the 1990s, to under 10% today (www.worldbank.org 2014b) By 2011, the whole country had 26.8 million netizens (VASS 2012) out of a total population of 91.5 million people, more than one-third of the population uses the internet and around 95% of those are between 15 and 24 years and live in urban Vietnam, mainly Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City (Cimigo 2011) However, there is a paradox with respect to Vietnamese Government policies, for on the one hand there is a fear of losing a grip on the ideology of the regime, while on the other hand, the Government wants to open-up and compete on the world stage (Nguyen-Vo 2008) Vietnamese government policy plays an important role in controlling pop culture among the youth Officially and on the surface, the government has tried to protect Vietnamese popular culture by controlling cultural imports from foreign countries Moreover, there is a fear of the possible impacts of consumerism and Western-style trends on Vietnamese culture and in line with Communist ideology (Nguyen-Vo 2008) At the same time Vietnamese authorities found, like governments everywhere, that the internet was notoriously difficult, time-consuming and expensive to monitor and control (Pam Nilan 1999) Therefore, unofficially and on a deeper level, the government has continued to leave it to the underground youth culture to decide Moreover, there are few rules or punishments in place for music products which plagiarize foreign music, those which have melodies similar to Hong Kong songs or styles similar to K-pop The Vietnamese government’s regulations, which have been strong in terms of political spheres, are quite loose in terms of pop music which is dominated by young audiences and producers Moreover, young Vietnamese indicate that they consume cultural products mainly according to their own tastes, regardless of the products’ nationalities Likewise the cultural tastes which the young people are living and experiencing has changed to reflect the advanced standards of living and cultural modernity they are experiencing Before DoiMoi, it was only propaganda music that dominated the Vietnamese music scene; however, now young people are concerned with the quality of cultural products, such as their refinement, creativity, individuality and diversity Therefore, Vietnamese nationalism has surged, suggesting an alternative globalization process is developing among the younger generation in terms of its identity Indonesia is a big country with a large population, ranked at the fourth of the world after China, India and the USA (Suryadinata, et al2003) Indonesia also is the largest Muslim country in the world (Stepan 2010) Within the country there are 1,072 ethnic and sub-ethnic groups in total; Malay is the third largest ethnic group after Javanese and Sundanese Ethnic Chinese, accounted for 1.5 % of the population, and are considered as the engine behind Indonesian economic growth (Suryadinata et al 2003) They are the principal minority who are active mainly in business in the major cities and relatively prosperous and widely resented by ethnic Indonesians (Suryadinata et al 2003) However, the scope of my research is not to focus on the ethnic, religion and political conflict issues in Indonesia but to understand how one of the ethnic group (Chinese Indonesian) reflect or represent themselves by consuming and reproducing K-pop Indonesian youths have been exposed to many kinds of foreign music during the past few decades According to Bodden (2005),"throughout the 1990s, 'alternative' musical genres such as rap, punk, and hard rock, derived from North American and European commercial cultures, captured the enthusiasm of large number of Indonesian youth" After the Suharto era (from 1967 to 1998), Japanese pop (J-pop or J-rock) also started to be popular in Indonesia (Surajaya 2010) Other cultural forms such as dramas from Japan, Taiwan and Korea have been accelerated on the basis of media liberalization processes in the post-Suharto era (Kim 2010) K-pop's popularity in Indonesia around 2010 “refers to the intricate intersection between capitalist desires of the Korean entertainment business sector, the globalized desires of the Indonesian media industry, and the local audiences' desire for cool, modern pop cultures” (Jung 2011) However, in comparing K-pop cover phenomenon between Vietnam and Indonesia, the effect of K-Pop among youth in Indonesia is not as big as in Vietnam due to the various ethnic majorities with different tastes Ethnic majorities are Javanese and Sundanese and Malay who have different tastes in Pop music For example, Dangdut music 2is the Indonesia’s most popular music which is close to Hindu and India music style (Weintraub2010) It is considered to be the popular music of working class The performers usually wear very short sexy clothes to show sexy dance movements Sometimes the audience can dance with performers as they singalong with songs about heartache, suffering and loss Malay pop style3 is consumed among middle lower class in Indonesia while foreign pop music such as US/UK or K-Pop is consumed among the upper middle class in Indonesian society However, K-Pop also has influenced some current Indonesian Pop music 4and some bands have styles inspired by K-Pop (Interviewed with Katherine, Chinese ethnicity, female, born in 1990, a K-drama fan on 11, May 2014, Jakarta) Also in the interview with Iman-the leader of I-Generation, he also indicated that he does not like Indonesian pop very much because it is very close to the Malay style A comparison of the price of Internet in Vietnam and in Indonesia shows that the price in Vietnam is cheaper In the Vietnamese context, the price of a Wi-Fi internet package at home is even cheaper in comparison with other countries in the region For example, the Internet package for family at the lowest rate is already $25USD in Jakarta, Indonesia while in Hanoi, Vietnam the same service is less than $10USD (equivalent to 180,000 VND) (Interviewed with Katherine, female, born in 1990, a K-drama fan on 11, May 2014) Cultural capital among K-pop cover groups There are several types of cultural capital the groups’ members possess as indicated in this study such as their education, dance skills, English language proficiency, family backgrounds and technological skills e.g the use of cameras, videos and internet resources Their cultural capital is also shown in the way they work and organize their groups’ activities, including the marketing strategies and plans they have developed for the future “Juwita Bahar - Buka Dikit Joss [Official Music Video HD],” YouTube, Last modified June 14, 2014,http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m7dR0wSxXxA “ST12 - P.U.S.P.A | VC Trinity”, YouTube, Last modified June 14, 2014, http://www.youtube.com/watch? v=AK66nMGhoek “SM*SH - I Heart You (official video)” YouTube, Last modified June 14, 2014, http://www.youtube.com/watch? v=4gTmNr1Bx2E and “Cherrybelle - Diam Diam Suka VC ( Official MV BerryGood Version )”, YouTube, Last modified June 14, 2014, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=63Z5_HnWrBA “Harga Paket Internet First Media Terbaru” Last modified June 14, 2014, http://www.daftarpaketinternet.com/harga-paketinternet-first-media-terbaru-2014 “Internet Vnpt Khuyến Mãi” Last modified June 14, 2014, http://internetvnpt.com.vn/ First I will investigate and analyze the common cultural capital possessed by both the study groups At the group level, by practicing K-pop dance covers, the members of YGLC, St.319 and I-Generation not only show their love for K-pop music and K-pop stars, but also show their ambition to jump into the national music industry and entertainment sector St.319 even has produced new products from Vietnamese songs with inspired K-pop dance and Western Rap on their own As a consequence, practicing K-pop covers can be seen as the first step for them towards becoming famous, both domestically and internationally At the individual level, even though dancers have strengths in different areas and make use of the capital they possess in different ways, they all have a good educational background Dancers in the study from Vietnam and Indonesia are B.A holders, even some are M.A holders In the Vietnamese cases, there are even dancers who studied abroad in Australia, the UK, the USA and Singapore for B.A and M.A curriculums Even though not all their families/parents are rich or in the ‘elite’, they have similar, dual approaches when it comes to their children’s career choices: accepting for their children to pursue both academic career and entertainment career To be more specific, on the one hand they expect their children to perform well at school and university, but they would also like their children to what they want, and are confident in their children’s ability to negotiate for their futures and work hard This family approach gives the children space to decide on their own path Moreover, practicing dance gives the young people a chance to experience and cultivate their own cultural capital, such as building their confidence, working in groups and time management skills, among others It also helps the children develop a sense of peer group emotional belonging and provides opportunities for their futures, including in business Whether they will continue working in the entertainment sector as professional artists, dancers or producers, or will follow their educational/academic lives and train for a job, keeping their career lives and hobbies separate, they still keep those skills and forms of capital with them to strengthen and nurture their daily lives This also reflects the fact that there are more choices for young people nowadays A successful career is not rigidly associated with an academic career or working as white-collar workers Success is now based on an individual’s actual experience, competitive benefits, capacity and passion The members of St.319 who studied or are studying abroad include the leader and founder, Aiden Nguyen – who was at London South Bank University, Mi Nhô Nguyen (Min) 10 who studied at Free University of Berlin, Chây Xi Trang (Tracy Trang) who studied in the USA, and Zac Nguyen who studied Global Advanced Bachelor of Business Administration at Giggs University in the UK Therefore, both groups have members who can speak English very well and have high standards in terms of keeping-up with the latest trends and clothes For example, on her first album, singer Min from St.319 speaks English during her album introduction, for she studied in Germany for four years and has travelled to several European countries For this, she is admired by her young Vietnamese fans I-Generation members have quite the same background and cultural capitals among their group They are of Indonesian-Chinese descent, Christian or Catholic, having parents working as entrepreneurs or in private sector The members of the group named Gloria Yakinny, Iman Suryadi, Juliet Magdalena, Novita Gabriella, Rendy White, Silvia Muryadi, Theresa Wienathan, Timotius Benyamin, and ZulyLexiva graduated with B.A in Business administration, marketing, management, food technology, and P.R; only one did not graduate B.A They regard dancing as their main jobs because they can get benefits from events in shopping malls, universities, high schools every week and because they feel more comfortable with this job comparing to working in the office which are competitive and produce less income Before practicing K-pop, they were already dancers and listening to several kinds of Western music such as Hip Hop, R &B Now they are listening to both KPop, Western and Indo music but feel closest to K-Pop as it is embodied through their cover dance with emotional melodies (sad or happy) which makes them feel in the songs At the moment, they are not yet proud of Indonesian pop music and think that it still needs to combine with Western more Pictures: Author interviewing I-Generation in Jakarta, May 2014 11 Moreover, as the group of my study is composed of Indonesian-Chinese descents, they also not like Indonesian pop style which they see as dominated by Malay pop style in Indonesian pop music They expect others to support their activities to bring Indonesian name and fame in covering K-pop dance into international level They not have K-Pop classes as the case of St319 or YGLC They only practice among their groups for events They are all freelancers (one member is the owner of online shop, another is an owner of a coffee shop in Jakarta) only one member is working for a company Dancing is considered as their main job At the same time, they are also working as backup dancers for Indonesian singers However, they not have a clear future for their dance career as well as academic career but aim to maintain and develop the name and activities of the group as long as possible They know about other countries such as Thailand with one of the best cover dance groups named “Next School” They think Vietnam has become more competitive The group and Iman – the leader of I-Generation (from Indonesia) has come to know about St.319 (from Vietnam) which has a very strong online fan base and big fame on YouTube and social media Before that IGeneration team had no idea about Vietnam Picture: Author at I-Generation’s Rehearsal Session in Jakarta, May 2014 The Role of Entertainment Sector to Reshape the Urban Youth Identity in the Region Thailand is playing an important role in mediating the cultural flows in the region (ASEAN) by borrowing K-pop dance to renew Thai pop songs With the aim of promoting new groups of Mono entertainment7, Mono Cover Dance Contest Season one and Season two “About Mono” Last modified June 14, 2014, http://www.mono.co.th/Our-Company.aspx Mono Group has a strategy to provide media services and contents worldwide Currently, Mono Group has offices in Indonesia and South Korea They also have distribution channels for their digital contents in Vietnam Founded in 1999 with the initial objective to offer information technology services, Mono Group now offers services and products via several media platforms Their services and products include entertainment news, music, movies, games, and horoscope available through various channels, such as the Internet, mobile phones, publications, satellite and cable TV, etc Aiming for further growth and overseas expansion, at the moment, there are international brands of Mono in Asia including countries 12 in 2013 were celebrated in Thailand and Vietnam This event has marked the turning point of reshaping a new cultural identity of youth in urban landscapes in the region by borrowing and renewing K-pop cover dance with localized Thai songs and disseminating those new products through the contest YG Lovers Crew (the K pop cover dance group) became the winner of the Season in Vietnam with the cover clip named "Automatic", covering the single of Candy Mafia-a Thai girl group which belongs to Mono Music, Thailand This contest was participated in by 29 groups and individuals with 31 video clips A fan told me that, “Mono Entertainment did expect that their contest had more people who participated and were supported but for a new group who just released their debut, it was not bad When I participated in the company, I felt that the company’s development strategies and training are quite similar to Korean entertainment companies, the members of groups also used to be K pop cover dancers The dance trainers of the company are also Koreans.” (Interviewed with Việt Anh, a fan of Thai drama, working at Mono Vietnam (28 th, Feb, 2014) in Hanoi, Vietnam) Conclusion Recent new policies in Vietnam and Indonesia, as well as the increased regional integration, have enabled people, and particularly the young, to consume more cultural products As young Vietnamese people from Generation Y see themselves in the transition between Socialist and Post-Socialist era and Generation Y of Chinese descent in Indonesia see themselves as a minority ethnic group after the Suharto era, these policies have been gradually adjusted to satisfy the countries’ people, and have given young people more social space to express themselves and form their own cultural identities The post-modern reordering of space and time among the lives of the urban youth in Vietnam and Indonesia has given rise to interesting and hybrid cultural forms, so that the past increasingly touches the technological present at key points, helping to construct new identities However, it must be asked whether, in the case of Vietnam and Indonesia, the oldworld is being lost entirely in favor of the self-serving individualism present in the late modernity period coming from ASEAN which are Vietnam and Indonesia and one from East Asia which is South Korea Among members in Board of Directors, there is one Korean named Mr Sang Do Lee, working as Director, Executive Director and Chief Executive Officer besides Thai managers 13 Cultural capital also plays a crucial role in the formation of K-pop fan culture To form groups, initially cultural capital is needed in the form of K-pop dance skills, the use of cameras and how to make videos However, to assert the brands and activities, and develop further, other cultural capital is required, such as experience to improve MVs in terms of their quality, and the number made, group management activities to run projects and performances, public relations through offline fan clubs and online pages on FB and You Tube The aim of this enhancement of expertise is to increase the fan base, the number of supporters and donors, and business management to make a profit and return funds to help develop the groups The nationalities of the cultural products they favor most are US/UK music and Kpop because they regard themselves as global citizens and consumers However, young people in particular feel closer to K-pop because they share with K-pop performers the same experiences and emotions, and because K-pop represents a new hybrid modernity which mixes Asian and Western culture What is behind the K-pop cover dance scene among young people is not necessarily that the young want to fight against the current regime, but what they actually want is to contribute to their fans’ community and/or their country, and also let other foreign communities know that young Vietnamese and Indonesian have global and regional tastes and live in a new urban landscape However, as the history of the two countries have been shown, K-pop might not be the last destination for cultural flow due to new emerging countries/cultural flows around the region and in the world are trying to strengthen their current cultural capitals by borrowing another pop culture of the region and of the world *** REFERENCES Anderson, Benedict R O Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism Revised ed London: Verso, 1991 Bodden, Michael "Rap in Indonesian Youth Music of the 1990s: "Globalization," "Outlaw Genres," and Social Protest." Asian Music 36, no (2005): 1–26 Bourdieu, Pierre Distinction: A Social Critique of the Judgement of Taste Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1984 14 Cheng, Adrian "10 K-pop Dance Cover Artists That Dance like Your Idols." Hellokpop.com, April 16, 2013 Accessed November 17, 2013 http://www.hellokpop.com/editorial/10k-pop-dance-cover-artists-that-dance-like-your-idols/ Cunningham, Stuart, and Tina Nguyen "The Popular Media of the Vietnamese Diaspora." Media International Australia, Incorporating Culture & Policy, no 91 (1999): 125-47 Cimigo, “Vietnam NetCitizens Report 2011”, (Online) Accessed June 12, 2013, http://www.slideshare.net/ngvdung/researchnetcitizen-report-2011en Harker, Richard K "Education and Cultural Capital." In An Introduction to the Work of Paul Bourdieu: The Practice and Theory, edited by Richard K Harker, Cheleen Mahar and Chris Wilkes London: Macmillan Press, 1990 Huat, Chua Beng "Conceptualizing an East Asian Popular Culture." Inter-Asia Cultural Studies 5, no (2004): 200-21 Iwabuchi, Koichi Recentering Globalization: Popular Culture and Japanese Transnationalism Durham: Duke University Press, 2002 Jung, Sun "K-pop, Indonesia Fandom, and Social Media’." Transformative Works and Cultures (TWC) (Online) Accessed January 10, 2014, doi: 10.3983/twc.2011.0289 url: http://journal.transformativeworks.org/index.php/twc/article/view/289 Jung, Sun Korean Masculinities and Transcultural Consumption Yonsama, Rain, Oldboy, KPop Idols Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, 2011 Kang, Dredge Byung'chu "Being fabulous, becoming spectacular: Embodied mimesis, delayed authenticity, and transnational transgender personification in Thai K-Pop Cover dance." In 1st World Congress for Hallyu, Seoul, Korea, (2013): 18-19 Kim, Daisy "Reappropriating Desires in Neoliberal Societies through KPop." M.A thesis, University of California, Los Angeles, 2012 Kim, Hyung-Jun "Love and Islam in Two Indonesian films." In Pop Culture Formations across East Asia, edited by Shim, Doobo, Ariel Heryanto, and Ubonrat Siriyuvasak Seoul: Jimoondang: 49-58, 2010 Kim, Youna "The Rising East Asian ‘wave’." In Media on the move: Global flow and contra-flow, edited by Thussu, Daya Kishan, pp 121-133, London and New York: Routledge, 2007 Lim, Tania "Renting East Asian Popular Culture for Local Television:." In East Asian Pop Culture: Analysing the Korean Wave, pp 32-51, edited by Chua Beng Huat and Koichi Iwabuchi Hong Kong University Press, 2008 15 Nilan, Pam "Young People and Globalizing Trends in Vietnam." Journal of Youth Studies 2, no.3 (1999): 353-70, 1999 Stepan, Alfred "Religion, Democracy, and the “Twin Tolerations” in " Journal of Democracy 11, no (2000): 37-57 Baltimore, MD: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2000 Surajaya, I Ketut "Japanese studies in Indonesia." In Japanese Studies: Changing Global Profile, edited by P.A George 216-33 New Delhi: Northern Book Centre, 2010 Suryadinata, Leo, and Evi Nurvidya Arifin and Aris Ananta Indonesia's Population: Ethnicity and Religion in a Changing Political Landscape Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 2003 The World Bank, “Vietnam” worldbank.org (online) Accessed July 18, 2014, http://data.worldbank.org/country/vietnam The World Bank, “Joint Vietnam-World Bank Group Study Will Seek Path for Higher Economic Growth” worldbank.org (online) Accessed July 18, 2014, http://www.worldbank.org/en/news/press-release/2014/07/17/joint-vietnam-worldbank-group-study-will-seek-path-for-higher-economic-growth Thomas, Mandy "East Asian cultural traces in post-socialist Vietnam." Rogue flows: transAsian cultural traffic 1, edited by Koichi Iwabuchi, Stephen Muecke, and Mandy Thomas, pp 177-195 Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, 2004 Thussu, Daya Kishan “Mapping global media flow and contra-flow” in Media on the Move: Global Flow and Contra-flow, edited by Daya Kishan Thussu pp 11-32 London and New York: Routledge, 2007 Vo, Thu The Ironies of Freedom Sex, Culture, and Neoliberal Governance in Vietnam Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2008 Weintraub, Andrew N Dangdut Stories: A Social and Musical History of Indonesia's Most Popular Music New York: Oxford University Press, 2010 Zickuhr, Kathryn "Generation 2010” Pewinternet.org, December 16, 2010 Accessed November 17, 2013, http://www.pewinternet.org/2010/12/16/generations-2010/ 16 ... Japanese pop (J-pop or J-rock) also started to be popular in Indonesia (Surajaya 2010) Other cultural forms such as dramas from Japan, Taiwan and Korea have been accelerated on the basis of media liberalization... Mono Cover Dance Contest Season one and Season two “About Mono” Last modified June 14, 2014, http://www.mono.co.th/Our-Company.aspx Mono Group has a strategy to provide media services and contents... the owner of online shop, another is an owner of a coffee shop in Jakarta) only one member is working for a company Dancing is considered as their main job At the same time, they are also working