Religion, Business, and Global Visions: An Exploration of South Korea’s Discourse on Halal

Driven by economic exigencies, the Korean government began to strategize entering the rapidly expanding Islamic economy during the early 2000s. Subsequently, decisions to invest into the global halal market ignited public opposition from Korean evangelicals who rejected the positive economic framing...

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Main Author: Ray Kim
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Korea University, Center for Korean History 2021-08-01
Series:International Journal of Korean History
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ijkh.khistory.org/upload/pdf/ijkh-26-2-117.pdf
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spelling doaj-3317e849b9994ac7b35c6f78b3677c4d2021-09-15T23:17:41ZengKorea University, Center for Korean HistoryInternational Journal of Korean History1598-20412508-59212021-08-0126211714910.22372/ijkh.2021.26.2.117550Religion, Business, and Global Visions: An Exploration of South Korea’s Discourse on HalalRay Kim0Ph.D. Candidate in Religious and Theological Studies at Georgetown University where he specializes in the globalization of IslamDriven by economic exigencies, the Korean government began to strategize entering the rapidly expanding Islamic economy during the early 2000s. Subsequently, decisions to invest into the global halal market ignited public opposition from Korean evangelicals who rejected the positive economic framing of halal—an Islamic concept most commonly used to inform Muslim dietary laws. Based on fieldwork in Korea and analysis of Korean media sources, this article tracks the development of this “halal discourse” through a frame analysis of the discourses created by the Korean government, economic actors, and anti-halal evangelicals, and evaluates the strengths and weaknesses of their arguments. As these competing voices debated halal’s place in Korean society, the supporters of halal had to respond to evangelical pushback against halal, leading to notable shifts in the public discourse on halal, an issue that was rooted in deeper underlying debates concerning multiculturalism, globalization, and competing visions of Korea.http://ijkh.khistory.org/upload/pdf/ijkh-26-2-117.pdfislamhalalglobalizationmulticulturalismislamophobia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ray Kim
spellingShingle Ray Kim
Religion, Business, and Global Visions: An Exploration of South Korea’s Discourse on Halal
International Journal of Korean History
islam
halal
globalization
multiculturalism
islamophobia
author_facet Ray Kim
author_sort Ray Kim
title Religion, Business, and Global Visions: An Exploration of South Korea’s Discourse on Halal
title_short Religion, Business, and Global Visions: An Exploration of South Korea’s Discourse on Halal
title_full Religion, Business, and Global Visions: An Exploration of South Korea’s Discourse on Halal
title_fullStr Religion, Business, and Global Visions: An Exploration of South Korea’s Discourse on Halal
title_full_unstemmed Religion, Business, and Global Visions: An Exploration of South Korea’s Discourse on Halal
title_sort religion, business, and global visions: an exploration of south korea’s discourse on halal
publisher Korea University, Center for Korean History
series International Journal of Korean History
issn 1598-2041
2508-5921
publishDate 2021-08-01
description Driven by economic exigencies, the Korean government began to strategize entering the rapidly expanding Islamic economy during the early 2000s. Subsequently, decisions to invest into the global halal market ignited public opposition from Korean evangelicals who rejected the positive economic framing of halal—an Islamic concept most commonly used to inform Muslim dietary laws. Based on fieldwork in Korea and analysis of Korean media sources, this article tracks the development of this “halal discourse” through a frame analysis of the discourses created by the Korean government, economic actors, and anti-halal evangelicals, and evaluates the strengths and weaknesses of their arguments. As these competing voices debated halal’s place in Korean society, the supporters of halal had to respond to evangelical pushback against halal, leading to notable shifts in the public discourse on halal, an issue that was rooted in deeper underlying debates concerning multiculturalism, globalization, and competing visions of Korea.
topic islam
halal
globalization
multiculturalism
islamophobia
url http://ijkh.khistory.org/upload/pdf/ijkh-26-2-117.pdf
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