
New Books in Popular Culture Areum Jeong, "K-Pop Fandom: Performing Deokhu from the 1990s to Today" (U Michigan Press, 2026)
Feb 10, 2026
Areum Jeong, a theater and performance scholar and longtime K-pop fan, blends autoethnography with fan research. She traces generations of K-pop fandom, explores fan labor and archiving practices, examines shifting parasocial intimacy and online mobilizations, and reflects on how fans shape K-pop’s cultural and political horizons.
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Modern Fan Rituals Have 1990s Roots
- Many core fan practices today (light sticks, chants, slogans) trace back to 1990s first‑generation fandom.
- Technologies changed form, but fundamental fan labor and rituals show historical continuity.
Authenticity Plus Intimacy Expectation
- K-pop idols are held to an authenticity standard combining talent with moral conduct and intimate accessibility.
- Platforms that mimic one‑on‑one chats intensify perceived intimacy and fan expectations.
Research Through Shared Fandom
- Jeong mainly interviewed Korean women and used participant-observation to reduce judgmental distance.
- She found fans were more candid because she posted her own fan activities publicly.

