Acknowledgments
Introduction: South Korean Cinema’s Transnational Trajectories
Part I From Classical Hollywood to the Korean Golden Age: Cinephilia, Modernization, and Postcolonial Genre Flows
1 Toward a Strategic Korean Cinephilia: A Transnational Détournement of Hollywood Melodrama
2 The Mamas and the Papas: Cross-Cultural Remakes, Literary Adaptations, and Cinematic “Parent” Texts
3 The Nervous Laughter of Vanishing Fathers: Modernization Comedies of the 1960s
4 Once upon a Time in Manchuria: Classic and Contemporary Korean Westerns
Part II From Cinematic Seoul to Global Hollywood: Cosmopolitanism, Empire, and Transnational Genre Flows
5 Reinventing the Historical Drama, De-Westernizing a French Classic: Genre, Gender, and the Transnational Imaginary in Untold Scandal
6 From Gojira to Goemul: “Host” Cities and “Post” Histories in East Asian Monster Movies
7 Extraordinarily Rendered: Oldboy, Transmedia Adaptation, and the US War on Terror
8 A Thirst for Diversity: Trends in Korean “Multicultural Films,” from Bandhobi to Where is Ronny?
Conclusion: Into “Spreadable” Spaces: Netflix, YouTube, and the Question of Cultural Translatability
Notes
Index