Reading List- The Promise of Gayness: Queers and Kin in South Korea

I love the name for chapter 4...

Timothy Gitzen's The Promise of Gayness: Queers and Kin in South Korea is a Master's thesis written in 2012. Here is the abstract:

This thesis examines whether the interrelationship of family and gay identity in South Korea is 
best understood as one of conflict, pitting a traditional, national, and filial constraint against a 
presumed global, progressive, and individualistic freedom, or whether it requires (or perhaps, in 
the narratives themselves, already provides) a different, more recursive understanding. This thesis explores the recursivity between gay identity and filial piety among college students in contemporary Korea while also providing a critique of a global gay paradigm that others may argue 
infiltrates Korean gay discourse.  The aim of this ethnography is not just to collect the stories that 
these young South Korean college men tell about their experiences of being gay and a son, but to 
trace how my position as a researcher and a friend are shaped by my experiences with other gay 
Korean men and how those positions are intimately tied to this ethnography as a whole.

This is the longest academic work I've found at more than 200 pages. From a quick scan, it looks like a very interesting read. However, since today is the anniversary of the repeal of prohibition, I've already had a large glass of wine and now moving on to a gin and tonic. No way I'm going to be reading all of this tonight. I'm just happy I can share it with my readers.