“The ban on Japanese popular culture”, which had been formed in the intersection between “Japan as a historical memory” and “Japan as cultural experience” was a phenomenon that existed because of “the local” particularity of the relationship between Japan and Korea. In the 1980s, in response to strong pressure from the U.S. government, Korean society began to recognize the culture industry anew by joining the Universal Copyright Convention. This meant fundamental changes to the structure of the ban, since Japanese popular culture, which had been distributed and consumed in Korea spite of “the ban”, became the subject of protection by the “global” legal system.
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