PROCESS TRACING OF POP CULTURE, PUBLIC DIPLOMACY, AND SOFT POWER A comparative study between Korea and Japan
Abstract
The purpose of this thesis is to test under what conditions pop culture can be used for soft
power creation. The scientific background to this research problem is rooted in that the
evidence from previous research is inconsistent, since some results point out that
governmental efforts could do more harm than good for a country’s pop cultural soft power
generation, while some results instead support state-led pop cultural promoting efforts. This is
problematic since it can make it complicated for states to shape efficient public diplomacy
efforts. While current theoretical framework and previous research highlights the importance
of several factors in soft power generation and public diplomacy efforts aimed at foreign
publics, such as voluntary actions, attraction, dialogue-styled communication efforts, sincere
messages, and an active civil society, it is difficult to see how these different mechanisms
could lead to pop cultural soft power generation, and under which conditions these
mechanisms have a positive effect on pop culture soft power. Therefore, this study combines
the insights from previous research with current theoretical framework to create a new
analytical framework. The framework is aimed at testing under what conditions three public
diplomacy mechanisms; contents and messages, civic virtue and civil society, and financial
investments and supportive policies, can increase pop cultural soft power generation. By
comparing the cases of Korea and Japan, the results from this investigation suggest that the
conditions under which the three public diplomacy mechanisms function are important for
pop culture soft power generation.
Degree
Master theses
Collections
Date
2025-04-10Author
Mossberg, Linnéa
Keywords
Pop culture, Public diplomacy, Soft power, Korea, Japan.
Language
eng