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A Bar Where Nobody Orders Drinks: How Korea’s Drinking Culture Is Changing

A Bar Where Nobody Orders Drinks: How Korea’s Drinking Culture Is Changing

By None

Current price: $8.99
Visit retailer's website
A Bar Where Nobody Orders Drinks: How Korea’s Drinking Culture Is Changing

Coles

A Bar Where Nobody Orders Drinks: How Korea’s Drinking Culture Is Changing

By None

Current price: $8.99
Loading Inventory...

Size: Kobo eBook

Visit retailer's website
*Product information and pricing may vary - to confirm current pricing, availability, shipping, and return information please contact Coles. In the event of a pricing discrepancy, the retailer's price will apply.
A Bar Where Nobody Orders Drinks is a cultural analysis of a familiar Korean scene that now feels subtly different: tables are full, conversation is long, food orders are abundant—yet bottles stay nearly untouched. Rather than treating drinking less as a moral shift or a simple "health trend," this book follows a structural question: what happens when alcohol stops being the center of social life and becomes optional? Across workplaces, universities, and nightlife, the book traces how drinking in Korea has been reorganized—from expansion to maintenance, from group pace to personal control, from loud collective intoxication to distributed, quieter forms of reward. The chapters examine: why heavy drinking no longer functions as a standard rite of belonging how COVID-era disruption weakened the transmission of group-drinking norms the rise of "managed drinking," tasting culture, and premium choices the shift from bar-centered consumption to home-centered routines how dopamine paths compete with alcohol: fitness, content, travel, and curated leisure why the night may feel quieter—without becoming simpler This is not a forecast and not a condemnation. It is a record of a transition: alcohol hasn't vanished, but its social function has moved —and Korea's evening rhythm is being redesigned in the process.
A Bar Where Nobody Orders Drinks is a cultural analysis of a familiar Korean scene that now feels subtly different: tables are full, conversation is long, food orders are abundant—yet bottles stay nearly untouched. Rather than treating drinking less as a moral shift or a simple "health trend," this book follows a structural question: what happens when alcohol stops being the center of social life and becomes optional? Across workplaces, universities, and nightlife, the book traces how drinking in Korea has been reorganized—from expansion to maintenance, from group pace to personal control, from loud collective intoxication to distributed, quieter forms of reward. The chapters examine: why heavy drinking no longer functions as a standard rite of belonging how COVID-era disruption weakened the transmission of group-drinking norms the rise of "managed drinking," tasting culture, and premium choices the shift from bar-centered consumption to home-centered routines how dopamine paths compete with alcohol: fitness, content, travel, and curated leisure why the night may feel quieter—without becoming simpler This is not a forecast and not a condemnation. It is a record of a transition: alcohol hasn't vanished, but its social function has moved —and Korea's evening rhythm is being redesigned in the process.

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