I Went to Seoul
It was a whirlwind five day trip, including 24 hours of travel each way. I had excellent colleagues and travel companions in Dave, Amanda, Jaewoo, and John. We managed to cover a lot of ground in a short time, both with the engineers and researchers at Samsung, and in our explorations of the city and the DMZ.
Yet I seem to be having trouble putting together any interesting commentary or reflection on Seoul. I can say that in some places, like among the students, shoppers and partiers in Insadon and Dongdaemun, the electricity and newness felt very much like Tokyo. And at other times, wandering the backalleys and outdoor markets, or watching the motorbikers carry impossibly bulky loads through crowded streets, I recalled the chaos of Bangkok and Saigon. Then there were those experiences absolutely unique to Korea, like the outdoor performance that Dave and I stumbled on, some blend of Taiko and the circus, with young women jumping and singing and drumming, and older men leaving the circle of spectators to dance drunkenly around in the center. Throughout the first two days we were also working, giving talks and a workshop at Samsung and meeting with engineers. It was a busy few days. The jetlag didn’t help.
One of many markets.
Some sort of food, hard to know what, probably spicy.
We happened to be in the right part of town at the right time…
A labor rights rally demonstration was happening…
Riot police were out in force. Hundreds of police sat in buses or on the street on their riot shields, smoking cigarettes, listening to music on their headphones, waiting for the rally to move outside its designated area. We heard later that it did. We’re told Korean police like to use tear gas.
Sometimes it is fun to be a tourist.
Amanda found out about this show at the modern art museum.
Jaewoo overordered. It looks nice here, but got messy really fast.
Approaching the DMZ.
That’s all we could see of the DMZ.
Dave and Amanda in Dongdaemun.
Samsung has tight security.
Advertisements of a comedy show
Insadon was hip.
More please.
Reminds me of a book I read as a kid.
The aftermath of the Samsung dinner.


October 31st, 2006 at 12:50 pm
Seoul food. How’s the gruel? Good to see you enjoying life.
Rick