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John Gonzalez was born in a small town of twelve thousand people in the highlands of Mexico, where many people aspire to go north in search of opportunity and a way to escape poverty. He did not desire to go north, but his parents did. At the tender age of thirteen, they immigrated him and the rest of the family to the United States. They hoped he would forge a solid future for himself. John never forgot why his parents chose to leave their home country or the sacrifices they made in uprooting the family. He remained focused on education and work, which enabled him to exceed his family's expectations. From an early age, Gonzalez envisioned becoming a school principal. He learned English and French and obtained several degrees, including a doctorate in educational leadership from UCLA. After receiving his doctorate, Gonzalez was appointed American Council on Education Fellow. He has held academic positions from middle to graduate school in the U.S. John lived in South Korea for five years, where he worked at an American high school and immersed himself in the Korean culture. He enjoys traveling around the world and meeting people from all walks of life. As a yoga master, he volunteers to teach yoga and meditation in the community in his spare time.

SOUTH KOREA Cover
HISTORY

SOUTH KOREA

BY • POSTED ON March 24, 2024

South Korea is a wealthy and technologically advanced country, but its citizens are anxious, stressed, and headed toward demographic collapse, according to Gonzalez and Lee’s book-length study.

Gonzalez, an American educator who’s taught high school in South Korea, and Lee, a South Korean financial analyst and professor, have conducted a wide-ranging survey of the titular country’s manifest virtues and nagging problems. On the plus side, they note, is a culture that values hard work, competitiveness, self-sacrifice, and efficiency; society demands instant solutions to every problem and employs all manner of time-saving gadgetry, from restaurant call buttons that instantly summon waiters to self-service medical kiosks. The authors have found much unhappiness beneath the bustle, however. Several chapters discuss South Korea’s preoccupation with education: In the struggle to score well on the all-important exams that govern admission to elite universities, parents supplement their kids’ regular schooling with expensive “cram schools” and private tutoring, both of which strain family finances and leave students exhausted from the pressure. (An unexpected consequence, the authors note, is degree inflation: 69% of young Koreans have postsecondary degrees, which devalues educational credentials in the job market.) The authors also spotlight high rates of fatal accidents—capsized ferries, building collapses, deadly fires, workplace mishaps—stemming from lax safety regulations, corner-cutting, and corruption. They investigate what they see as a widespread soul-sickness that manifests in the corrosion of traditional norms and the younger generation’s sense of being stuck in a materialistic rat race (as in the Netflix series Squid Game, which depicts a South Korean game show in which players risk sudden death for money). The book also confronts a truly existential risk for the country in the form of extremely low fertility rates.

The authors construct their panorama of South Korea’s fortunes by combining illuminating statistics and graphs with an intimate, deeply observed account of cultural aspects, from the intense popularity of K-pop and plastic surgery to the warm tradition of sharing food with strangers. (Their vignette of a South Korean dinner paints a vibrant portrait of Confucian values in everyday life: “Everyone digs in with zest, enjoying every bite while being careful not to appear too eager or selfish or eat faster or larger quantities than the rest of the group.”) The lucid, workmanlike prose adds psychological resonance to the sociology (“Young Koreans are devastated by and frustrated with the economy’s inability to create sufficient, well-paying permanent jobs to accommodate the number of university graduates”), and it’s supplemented by revealing interviews: “Employment is… It’s like a big wall and trauma for me,” observes one young job seeker. “As soon as I graduated, I felt like an unnecessary [piece of] garbage in society, and no matter how hard I tried, I couldn’t even get an interview.” Readers interested in South Korea’s paradoxical tensions will find a wealth of insights, but the authors offer a larger lesson about the trajectory of modernity that could apply to many other countries that, having dedicated themselves to economic growth and material abundance, find themselves mired in a frustrating spiritual malaise.

An absorbing analysis of the social discontentment that plagues South Korea’s economic success.

Pub Date: March 24, 2024

ISBN: 9781737651321

Page count: 274pp

Publisher: Self

Review Posted Online: May 23, 2024

SOUTH KOREA Cover
HISTORY

SOUTH KOREA

BY • POSTED ON Dec. 22, 2019

Debut author Gonzalez, with co-author Lee, offers a searching reflection on the tension between South Korea’s embrace of globalization and its ancient culture.

When California teacher and guidance counselor Gonzalez first visited South Korea in the 1990s, he was astonished by its technological sophistication, which, by many measures, surpassed the United States’. He lived and taught there for 5 years, starting in 2012, and was impressed by “hard-working, entrepreneurial, goal-oriented, practical, and sacrificial Korean people” in a nation that historically weathered war and financial crisis to become a fiercely competitive player on the world stage. At the heart of South Korea’s success, he says, is its cultural emphasis on efficiency—a “way of life” for many citizens, who place extraordinary importance on conventional career accomplishment. However, for a culture with a long history of Confucian and Taoist traditions, the shift toward more traditionally Western values has come at a steep cost, according to the author, who thoughtfully investigates the ways in which a focus on efficiency and competition has negatively affected university admissions and infrastructure, to name two examples. Even more worrisome, he says, many “longstanding traditions seem to be declining,” including the valorization of unity and harmony, reverence for elders, and other traditional family values. Gonzalez astutely charts this tension, and overall, his appraisal of South Korea is impressively comprehensive, encompassing many aspects of its complex culture, even including eating habits. However, he has a tendency to bury the reader under far too much granular detail; for instance, he dwells at protracted length on recent industrial accidents—much more than is necessary to make his argument. Nevertheless, Gonzalez combines his rigorous research with a depth of personal experience, lucidly presented in this admiring but critical account.

An edifying analysis that’s exacting but fair.

Pub Date: Dec. 22, 2019

ISBN: 978-1-67423-215-7

Page count: 442pp

Publisher: Self

Review Posted Online: Feb. 16, 2021

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 2021

Awards, Press & Interests

Passion in life

Travel, meet people from different cultures, yoga, and meditation

SOUTH KOREA: THE PRICE OF EFFICIENCY AND SUCCESS: Indie Books We Love, 2021

SOUTH KOREA: THE PRICE OF EFFICIENCY AND SUCCESS: L.A. Weekly, Best Indie Books for Spring, 2024

SOUTH KOREA: THE PRICE OF EFFICIENCY AND SUCCESS: Red Ribbon The Wishing Shelf Book Awards, 2020

SOUTH KOREA: THE PRICE OF EFFICIENCY AND SUCCESS: Best Audiobook International Book Awards, 2020

SOUTH KOREA: THE PRICE OF EFFICIENCY AND SUCCESS: International Latino Book Award, 2020

SOUTH KOREA: THE PRICE OF EFFICIENCY AND SUCCESS: Finalist Independent Author Network Book of the Year Awards, 2021

SOUTH KOREA: THE PRICE OF EFFICIENCY AND SUCCESS: IndieReader Discovery Award Finance/Investment/Economics category, 2021

ADDITIONAL WORKS AVAILABLE

COREA DEL SUR: El precio de la eficiencia y el éxito

In COREA DEL SUR: El precio de la eficiencia y el éxito, primera edición (SOUTH KOREA: The Price of Efficiency and Success, First Edition), authors John Gonzalez and Young Lee combine their backgrounds and professional experiences to look behind the public face of South Korea. Through stories, anecdotes, and hard evidence, they capture Koreans being themselves without the glamour and glitz of K-pop, K-beauty, and K-drama. They examine the conditions, behavioral patterns, and cultural values that helped lift the country from the ashes after the Korean War to the international stage as the fourth-largest economy in Asia and 12th in the world. Their analysis includes the price Koreans have paid for the country’s astonishing achievements and the existing social inequality.
Published: July 26, 2021
ISBN: 9781737651307
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