“In writings about K-pop, my ultimate bias is Areum Jeong. In K-Pop Fandom, she deftly explores how the practices of K-pop fans are culturally significant and meaningful. Analyzing labor and identity practices, narrative and storytelling, and political resistance, Jeong's work moves far beyond the specifics of music to examine the power of audiences today. This is required reading for scholars and fans of K-pop.”— Paul Booth, DePaul University
“Areum Jeong’s K-Pop Fandom is brilliantly focused on fans’ affective labor and its many materializations. Paying careful attention to the industrial forces of K-pop, Jeong analyzes the issue of excessive consumption alongside fans’ community and independently published memoirs that seek to evade the enclosures of neoliberal capitalism. Smart and immersive, this is a must-read for anyone wanting to understand the passions and practices of K-pop fandom.” — Matt Hills, author of Fan Cultures
“By bringing her own extraordinary ethnographic and historical analyses of K-pop into dialogue with existing literature on fandom and performance, Jeong vividly and sensitively communicates the novelty and significance of K-pop in South Korea to the fandom studies literature. This book will be an important text for scholars, educators, and students of Korean media studies. Jeong’s book will be a seminal touchstone in the field of K-pop studies for many years to come.”— Thomas Baudinette, Macquarie University
“Keen analysis of music industry trends and fan labor blends seamlessly with Jeong’s thoughtful foray down memory lane, which positions her at the forefront of K-pop’s past and present, both as a witness and active participant. This book feels intimate and exploratory, delving deeper into the concept of deokhu for English-language scholarship while interrogating the connection between fan labor, fan expectation, and fanaticism.”— Tamar Herman, author of BTS: Blood, Sweat & Tears