“…Literature on multiculturalism essentially posits Korea's demographic change as being a product of (a) rapid industrialization during the developmental years, and (b) the arrival of the modern globalization age. Though once idealized as a nation-state homogenous in ancestry, blood, culture, and language (see e.g., Ahn, 2013;Hunt, 2017;Kang, 2010;Landsman et al, 2014;Oh et al, 2012;Seol, 2014;Shin, 2006), the presence of a growing foreign populace challenges the monolithic nature of Korean society (Choi, 2010). With the signal visit of Hines Ward in 2006, the belief in a monocultural and monoracial Korea gave way to the conceptualization of Korea as multicultural and multiethnic (N. Kim, 2014;Lim, 2010).…”