The Risk of Compressed Modernity

1. Edition May 2025
240 Pages, Hardcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd
In many Asian societies, the process of modernization often took place in a rapid and highly compressed fashion - not over centuries, as had happened in most Western societies, but in several decades. This enabled Asian societies to achieve high levels of economic growth very quickly, but it also harbored unexpected risks and costs that threatened further development. The very mechanisms and strategies that made their explosive modernization possible tended to produce existentially hazardous consequences in virtually all areas of public and private life, and seemingly insurmountable obstacles to sustained advances in the future.
Focusing on South Korea and other Asian countries, this book presents a critical account of compressed modernity and its key structural risks. These include endemic political crises, distorted industrial governance, widespread labor displacement, worsening intellectual and cultural dependency, rampant environmental and physical hazards, and even abrupt demographic meltdown. However, these risks and contradictions have also stimulated structural reforms and adaptations, opening up the possibility for the kind of radical change that Ulrich Beck described as "the metamorphosis of the world."
Introduction: Compressed Modernity and Its Structural Risks
Part I Democracy, Capitalism, Social Class
1. Borrowed Democracy, State-Projective Politics, and Institutional Functional Conflations
2. Normal Corruption: Utilitarian Institutional Dualities and Technocratized4Authoritarian (In)justice
3. Class Contradictions of State Capitalist Industrialism: The "Chaebol Republic"
4. The Proletarian Predicament of Developmental Compression: Social Conditions of Flexibly Complex Capitalism
Part II Culture, Family, Life Risk
5. Reflexive Postcoloniality: Intellectual and Cultural Contradictions of Compressed Modernity
6. Compressed Modernity, Gender, and Obfuscated Family Crisis: Individualization without Individualism
7. Complex Risk Society: Risk Components of Compressed Modernity
Part III Prospect
8. A Beckian Metamorphosis?
Notes
References
Index
Bryan S. Turner, Australian Catholic University
"This book not only illuminates South Korea's compressed modernity, but extends Ulrich Beck's cosmopolitan sociology across axes of politics, class, institutions, family, culture, and gender. Chang Kyung-Sup writes for South Koreans and those interested in Beck, but also invites comparisons across East Asia and the world to refigure the catastrophic metamorphosis through which we all live."
Michael D. Kennedy, Brown University