More and more Koreans have trouble with sleep. Solutions abound, but will they be enough to address deeper structural causes?
If Squid Game was all about inequality in Korea, watch director Yeon Sang-ho's latest for what it says about that elusive notion of justice.
After Pew Research Center published its findings about what makes life meaningful in 17 developed economies, the answers from Korea startled many.
Alarming reports in foreign media about Korea's Covid situation don't take into consideration the country's strengths vis-à-vis Europe.
Creating a 'second character'—bukae in Korean—has become something of a fashion. What does it mean for the digital future we are heading into?
KÉ is back as a subscription-based newsletter. Let us know what you would like to know about Korea!
People pledging organs as collaterals for loans. Does that happen for real in Korea?
A story of Koreans risking their lives for a financial jackpot isn't so far-fetched when thinking about the Korean economy today.
Demonstrations are a routine occurrence in downtown Seoul, but I don’t mind it in the least. Angry chanting is a familiar soundtrack to life in South Korea; when slogans reverberate at the capital’s most symbolic locations, you know the country is well. Democracy lives. I am fortunate to
The first sign that my visit to Seoul would be different this time came at the Frankfurt airport check-in counter. After seeing my passport and ensuring that I had a valid visa, the Asiana Airlines employee showed me a laminated sheet of paper with two QR codes: one for android
South Koreans are infamously impatient. The country zipped through a spectacular makeover from a dirt-poor, post-war agrarian society into a manufacturing superstar. True to its national temperament, it is now aging faster than any other country thanks to one of the world’s lowest birth rates. From the economy to
As 2020 begins, the optimism that permeated South Korea in late 2016 and early 2017 seems but a distant memory. Three years ago, hundreds of thousands were holding peaceful weekly demonstrations—popularly dubbed the “Candlelight Revolution” for the candle-carrying participants—against corruption on the part of then-president Park Geun-hye and