Berliner Boersenzeitung - The real-life violence that inspired South Korea's 'Squid Game'

EUR -
AED 4.364552
AFN 78.426697
ALL 96.878983
AMD 450.193226
ANG 2.127122
AOA 1089.656166
ARS 1708.476407
AUD 1.717322
AWG 2.138911
AZN 2.008692
BAM 1.96031
BBD 2.393567
BDT 145.414313
BGN 1.995568
BHD 0.448039
BIF 3529.202359
BMD 1.188284
BND 1.508165
BOB 8.229416
BRL 6.276159
BSD 1.188414
BTN 107.996806
BWP 15.640903
BYN 3.388695
BYR 23290.359005
BZD 2.390139
CAD 1.629268
CDF 2620.165597
CHF 0.922649
CLF 0.026034
CLP 1027.948186
CNY 8.286616
CNH 8.258173
COP 4388.92556
CRC 588.087527
CUC 1.188284
CUP 31.489516
CVE 110.525773
CZK 24.242709
DJF 211.181814
DKK 7.468339
DOP 74.416203
DZD 153.505927
EGP 55.815705
ERN 17.824254
ETB 185.694425
FJD 2.62789
FKP 0.872174
GBP 0.868275
GEL 3.196584
GGP 0.872174
GHS 12.959631
GIP 0.872174
GMD 86.744985
GNF 10409.560197
GTQ 9.120596
GYD 248.637679
HKD 9.266176
HNL 31.345109
HRK 7.532545
HTG 155.748783
HUF 381.753337
IDR 19890.620146
ILS 3.703185
IMP 0.872174
INR 108.976719
IQD 1556.786164
IRR 50056.447794
ISK 145.398398
JEP 0.872174
JMD 187.072952
JOD 0.842482
JPY 183.11035
KES 153.229362
KGS 103.915762
KHR 4788.31765
KMF 499.079349
KPW 1069.476077
KRW 1715.216032
KWD 0.364326
KYD 0.990332
KZT 597.128859
LAK 25638.599297
LBP 106421.589874
LKR 367.938109
LRD 219.858732
LSL 19.056622
LTL 3.508692
LVL 0.718781
LYD 7.504707
MAD 10.800182
MDL 20.048217
MGA 5359.668091
MKD 61.775753
MMK 2495.318225
MNT 4237.50047
MOP 9.544679
MRU 47.392818
MUR 54.090869
MVR 18.358894
MWK 2060.670593
MXN 20.632068
MYR 4.712142
MZN 75.943472
NAD 19.055336
NGN 1682.027508
NIO 43.733552
NOK 11.606263
NPR 172.793961
NZD 1.988046
OMR 0.456897
PAB 1.188404
PEN 3.985437
PGK 5.157168
PHP 70.22934
PKR 332.782764
PLN 4.207659
PYG 7986.37249
QAR 4.332422
RON 5.097023
RSD 117.401267
RUB 90.936877
RWF 1733.883609
SAR 4.456151
SBD 9.653154
SCR 16.616665
SDG 714.734911
SEK 10.614694
SGD 1.508716
SHP 0.89152
SLE 28.994764
SLL 24917.712555
SOS 677.979648
SRD 45.303294
STD 24595.071855
STN 24.558149
SVC 10.398534
SYP 13141.911722
SZL 19.041086
THB 37.014823
TJS 11.093821
TMT 4.158993
TND 3.431826
TOP 2.861102
TRY 51.514712
TTD 8.076123
TWD 37.373304
TZS 3018.240682
UAH 51.235986
UGX 4212.904425
USD 1.188284
UYU 44.595217
UZS 14361.885267
VES 418.591223
VND 31118.17737
VUV 142.315726
WST 3.274421
XAF 657.511091
XAG 0.01102
XAU 0.000235
XCD 3.211396
XCG 2.141753
XDR 0.817636
XOF 657.508318
XPF 119.331742
YER 283.166138
ZAR 19.050943
ZMK 10695.97016
ZMW 23.203747
ZWL 382.626842
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    0.0300

    23.78

    +0.13%

  • RBGPF

    -1.5400

    82.5

    -1.87%

  • NGG

    1.0800

    82.58

    +1.31%

  • GSK

    1.1700

    50.32

    +2.33%

  • CMSD

    0.0300

    24.16

    +0.12%

  • BTI

    -0.1700

    58.99

    -0.29%

  • BCE

    -0.0500

    25.15

    -0.2%

  • RIO

    0.0400

    90.47

    +0.04%

  • BP

    0.2300

    36.76

    +0.63%

  • BCC

    -0.9300

    83.4

    -1.12%

  • RELX

    -0.3900

    39.51

    -0.99%

  • AZN

    1.2800

    94.23

    +1.36%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1200

    17

    -0.71%

  • JRI

    0.0500

    13.73

    +0.36%

  • VOD

    0.0600

    14.23

    +0.42%

The real-life violence that inspired South Korea's 'Squid Game'
The real-life violence that inspired South Korea's 'Squid Game' / Photo: Jung Yeon-je - AFP/File

The real-life violence that inspired South Korea's 'Squid Game'

A factory turned into a battlefield, riot police armed with tasers and an activist who spent 100 days atop a chimney -- the unrest that inspired Netflix's most successful show ever has all the hallmarks of a TV drama.

Text size:

This month sees the release of the second season of "Squid Game", a dystopian vision of South Korea where desperate people compete in deadly versions of traditional children's games for a massive cash prize.

But while the show itself is a work of fiction, Hwang Dong-hyuk, its director and writer, has said the experiences of the main character Gi-hun, a laid-off worker, were inspired by the violent Ssangyong strikes in 2009.

"I wanted to show that any ordinary middle-class person in the world we live in today can fall to the bottom of the economic ladder overnight," he has said.

In May 2009, Ssangyong, a struggling car giant taken over by a consortium of banks and private investors, announced it was laying off more than 2,600 people, or nearly 40 percent of its workforce.

That was the beginning of an occupation of the factory and a 77-day strike that ended in clashes between strikers armed with slingshots and steel pipes and riot police wielding rubber bullets and tasers.

Many union members were severely beaten and some were jailed.

- 'Many lost their lives' -

The conflict did not end there.

Five years later, union leader Lee Chang-kun held a sit-in for 100 days on top of one of the factory's chimneys to protest a sentence in favour of Ssangyong against the strikers.

He was supplied with food from a basket attached to a rope by supporters and endured hallucinations of a tent rope transformed into a writhing snake.

Some who experienced the unrest struggled to discuss "Squid Game" because of the trauma they endured, Lee told AFP.

The repercussions of the strike, compounded by protracted legal battles, caused significant financial and mental strain for workers and their families, resulting in around 30 deaths by suicide and stress-related issues, Lee said.

"Many have lost their lives. People had to suffer for too long," he said.

He vividly remembers the police helicopters circling overhead, creating intense winds that ripped away workers' raincoats.

Lee said he felt he could not give up.

"We were seen as incompetent breadwinners and outdated labour activists who had lost their minds," he said.

"Police kept beating us even after we fell unconscious -- this happened at our workplace, and it was broadcast for so many to see."

Lee said he had been moved by scenes in the first season of "Squid Game" where Gi-hun struggles not to betray his fellow competitors.

But he wished the show had spurred real-life change for workers in a country marked by economic inequality, tense industrial relations and deeply polarised politics.

"Despite being widely discussed and consumed, it is disappointing that we have not channelled these conversations into more beneficial outcomes," he said.

- 'Shadow of state violence' -

The success of "Squid Game" in 2021 left him feeling "empty and frustrated".

"At the time, it felt like the story of the Ssangyong workers had been reduced to a commodity in the series," Lee told AFP.

"Squid Game", the streaming platform's most-watched series of all time, is seen as embodying the country's rise to a global cultural powerhouse, part of the "Korean wave" alongside the Oscar-winning "Parasite" and K-pop stars such as BTS.

But its second season comes as the Asian democracy finds itself embroiled in some of its worst political turmoil in decades, triggered by conservative President Yoon Suk Yeol's failed bid to impose martial law this month.

Yoon has since been impeached and suspended from duties pending a ruling by the Constitutional Court.

That declaration of martial law risked sending the Korean wave "into the abyss", around 3,000 people in the film industry, including "Parasite" director Bong Joon-ho, said in a letter following Yoon's shocking decision.

Vladimir Tikhonov, a Korean studies professor at the University of Oslo, told AFP that some of South Korea's most successful cultural products highlight state and capitalist violence.

"It is a noteworthy and interesting phenomenon -- we still live in the shadow of state violence, and this state violence is a recurrent theme in highly successful cultural products."

(A.Berg--BBZ)