3.8 Article

Of fleas and Parasite: unpacking class and space in Bong Joon-ho's Barking Dogs Never Bite

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Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/17400309.2023.2246349

Keywords

Bong Joon-ho; Korean cinema; Asian studies; space; class; language

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This article argues that revisiting Barking Dogs Never Bite is instructive to understand the aesthetics and signatures of director Bong amidst the hype of Parasite fever. Both Parasite and Barking Dogs Never Bite depict the friction between power and the powerless through spatial metaphors, and this article explores how Bong's hybrid style of commercialism and social commentary is deeply rooted in the South Korean context.
This article argues that amidst the hype of Parasite fever, it is instructive to revisit Barking Dogs Never Bite (2000) in order to better understand the director's aesthetic and signatures. Not only does Parasite (2019) echo Bong's debut feature in narrative structure and visual style but both films depict the friction between power and the powerless through spatial metaphors. By offering a closer look at Barking Dogs Never Bite from an interdisciplinary approach - intersecting auteur theory and cultural studies approaches to class mobility and space - we indicate how the hybrid style of commercialism and social commentary in Bong's films are deeply rooted in the South Korean context.

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