American Unexceptionalism: Global Lessons on Fighting Religious Nationalism

003: South Korea: K-Pop Demon Hunters IRL

Nov 6, 2025
Helen J. Kim, a Professor of American religious history, and Ray Kim, Director at the International Center for Religion and Diplomacy, delve into South Korea's recent political upheaval. They discuss President Yoon's martial law attempt and the grassroots protests that followed. The conversation also explores the deep ties between Korean and American evangelicalism, highlighting unique protest traditions like shaving heads. Ultimately, they emphasize lessons for U.S. religious leaders on resisting authoritarianism and the role of K-Pop in cultural protest.
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INSIGHT

How Korea's Democracy Withstood A Coup

  • South Korea's democracy nearly collapsed when President Yoon declared martial law and ordered arrests in December 2024.
  • Rapid cross-party political action and mass street protests overturned martial law and led to Yoon's impeachment and arrest.
INSIGHT

Missionary Roots Shaped Korean Protestantism

  • American Protestant missionaries helped establish a robust Korean Protestant tradition in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
  • That tradition later became a vehicle for anti-colonial resistance against Japanese imperialism.
INSIGHT

Cold War Trauma Enters Religious Imagination

  • The Korean War and Cold War intensified anti-communist sentiment and linked religiosity to national survival.
  • That trauma made resistance to North Korea an existential theological issue for many Korean Christians.
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