Abstract

Popular films, which are cultural products, inevitably reflect the social and architectural culture of the time and the thoughts and interests of the public. This study analyzes the negative perceptions of apartment culture to verify how the negative characteristics of apartment housing were recognized by the general Korean public in a socio-cultural manner. For the analysis, a pool of artistically and publicly renowned Korean films between 1970 and 1999 was constructed. Through the scenes and their respective scripts, the characters, stories, cinematic messages, and architectural spaces were analyzed. The 1970s and 1980s films shed light on the large-scale, uniformly developed apartment complexes to reveal apartments as lonely, anonymous, closed spaces of the urban middle class. During the 1980s–1990s, the negative aspects of apartment developments were highlighted. These include a loss of place and memory, the disintegration of family, the deepening of relative poverty, and standardized desolated scenery. Negative perceptions toward apartments intensified in the 1990s to reveal a lack of communication between neighbors, externality, misunderstanding, and distrust. By diagnosing the Korean public’s negative view of apartments, this study will help find a better housing culture and the positive sustainability of apartments.

Highlights

  • In 2018, there were 10,826,044 apartments out of 17,633,327 houses (61.40%), while there were 3,948,984 detached houses (22.40%) in the same year [1]

  • We examine the negative perceptions of apartment culture through the analysis of Korean films between 1970 and 1999

  • Films made before the 1970s did not reveal the negative aspects of apartments

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Summary

Introduction

In 2018, there were 10,826,044 apartments out of 17,633,327 houses (61.40%), while there were 3,948,984 detached houses (22.40%) in the same year [1]. Apartments in Korea, which are representative of residential styles, have so far formed many positive perceptions, such as being convenient and safe to live in. Apartments have grown with ambivalent and complex characteristics as both the objects of envy and objects of resentment simultaneously. Despite the various negative perceptions, there seem to be no new types of housing alternatives available except for apartments. The mass construction of apartments is currently ongoing. This paper aims to examine the negative aspects of apartments from the public’s perspective with the sustainability of the housing culture in mind for apartments that occupy such an important position within Korean society

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