Affiliation:
1. English, Linguistics, and Theatre Studies , National University of Singapore , AS5, 7 Arts Link , Singapore , 117570 , Singapore
Abstract
Abstract
This paper considers how a particular understanding of personality, as manifest in the way discourses about personality types are circulated and employed, may serve as a foundation for rationalizing the logic of human capital and its concomitant inequalities. Focusing on the recent popularity of the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) in South Korea and the way it is adopted in online content offering advice on English language learning, this paper suggests that a conceptualization of personality as simultaneously enduring and inherent, on the one hand, and standardized and technologized, on the other, allows personality testing and personality type to serve as moral technologies of self that conceal the contradictions underlying the promotion of English language learning as a key to developing one’s human capital in neoliberal Korean society.
Reference28 articles.
1. 20dae 5 myeong jung 3 myeong, aleubaiteu chaeyong si MBTI pyeongga bandae, 2022, February 17. Albacheonguk. Available at: http://m.alba.co.kr/story/MediaReportView.asp?idx=3578&page=4.
2. Becker, Gary. 1993. Human Capital: A Theoretical and Empirical Analysis, with Special Reference to Education, 3rd edn. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
3. Bhatia, Sunil & Kumar Ravi Priya. 2018. Decolonizing culture: Euro-American psychology and the shaping of neoliberal selves in India. Theory & Psychology 28(5). 645–668. https://doi.org/10.1177/0959354318791315.
4. Cho, Hae-joang. 2015. The spec generation who can’t say “No”: Overeducated and underemployed youth in contemporary South Korea. Positions 23(3). 437–462. https://doi.org/10.1215/10679847-3125823.
5. Choi, Lee Jin. 2021. ‘English is always proportional to one’s wealth’: English, English language education, and social reproduction in South Korea. Multilingua 40(1). 87–106. https://doi.org/10.1515/multi-2019-0031.