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South Korea is facing a strong anti-feminism wave and feminists are in trouble

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Dristi Sharma
Dristi SharmaDec 06, 2022 | 07:00

South Korea is facing a strong anti-feminism wave and feminists are in trouble

Korean dramas are popular around the world for a variety of reasons. Out of all of the reasons that make them popular, feminism is on top of the list. K-Dramas, largely written by women, feature powerful female characters. However, the majority of women in South Korea face appalling life conditions.

Hate for feminism and feminists is on the rise in South Korea.

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  • To oppose this, feminists in South Korea are planning nationwide protests against gender-based violence this coming weekend; the first to occur simultaneously in several major cities since the pandemic, NPR reports.

Why did the anti-feminism wave start? For more than a decade now, men in South Korea were already frustrated with martial law for boys and would often organise anti-feminism rallies. They would claim that policies for 'women's justice are often used against the men'.

  • This feeling among men saw an all-time high in May 2022, when Yoon Suk Yeol became the country's president. 
Photo: Protesters demand fair trials for men accused of sexual assault at an anti-feminist rally in Seoul, November 2018/ CNN

How? Yoon Suk Yeol, a member of the conservative People Power Party in South Korea, supported men's rights. During his presidential campaigns, he used inflammatory statements and promised to abolish the women's gender equality ministry if he won. AND HE WON.

Photo: Yoon Suk Yeol

His opposition, Lee Jae-Myung, who was in favour of women's rights, lost the elections. 

Photo: Lee Jae-Myung

 

According to Yoon Suk Yeol, the duties of the gender discrimination ministry were to be transferred to the health department of South Korea in October 2022. However, the process of abolition of the gender discrimination ministry is still going on, what with opposition from several quarters. 

It is time for the country to shift from a paradigm of women's policies, focusing on improving discrimination against women, to a paradigm of gender equality for both men and women
- Interior Minister Lee Sang-min said in the government announcement

South Korea's condition: The 2022 World Economic Forum global gender gap report ranks South Korea 99th out of 146 countries in an index that examines jobs, education, health and political representation of women.

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'Feminism is hated': South Korea, no matter how it is presented, is still a patriarchal society in which women are expected to stay at home or meet ridiculous beauty standards.

According to NPR, men in South Korea frequently associate feminism with misandry, and they use the term "Femi" as a slur or associate it with mental illness for anyone who speaks about the challenges that women in South Korea face. 

According to a Unicosearch report, women make up 19% of lawmakers in South Korea, and 4.8% of executives at the country's top 100 corporations. Yoon's Cabinet currently consists of three women.
 

Last updated: December 06, 2022 | 07:00
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