@gimyeon47945629@malhll151559 Hong Kong’s Wuxia novels are based on ancient China,and showcasing Chinese culture. Here are some examples
射雕英雄傳:based on Song dynasty of China.
神雕俠侶:based on Song dynasty of China.
倚天屠龍記:based on Yuan dynasty of China
天龍八部:based on Song dynasty of China
@gimyeon47945629 Hong Kong’s Wuxia novel and movies are based on Chinese Wuxia culture and set in ancient China, which have no connection to Korea. Korea does not have any Wuxia culture.
@chukbaik What gives Koreans the right to arbitrarily appropriate Chinese Hanfu and culture into their "Oriental" comics?
Chinese Hanfu is neither Oriental clothing nor Oriental culture.
@Game_donnya Chinese Hanfu is Chinese Hanfu. It is NOT your so-called ‘Oriental costume’.
We absolutely do NOT welcome Koreans copying Chinese Hanfu & rebranding Hanfu as ‘Oriental costume’ . Just like Koreans wouldn’t call Hanbok ‘Oriental costumes’
@settin9sun plz STOP rebranding Chinese Hanfu, Chinese culture as oriental culture. Chinese culture is not a free source for your Korean/ ‘fake Oriental country’ comics. Koreans have no right to label Chinese culture as Oriental culture.
@Rantsinhere@hanbok_duckjil You guys are directly misappropriating Chinese artifacts to restore your ‘hanbok’ . Isn’t this clear enough?
Can’t you guys just stop misappropriating other countries’ artifacts which doesn’t belongs to you(Korea)?
These cultural relics are unearthed in China and has nothing to do with Korea, but now you are arbitrarily claiming these exclusive Chinese culture (artifacts) as East Asian culture, which is real ultranationalistic and robbery behaviour.
@Rantsinhere@hanbok_duckjil After including Chinese artifacts into a book about ‘Korea clothing’ ,Koreans start using Chinese artifacts as a reference to restore ‘Korean clothing’
Everyone knows Koreans’ intention in including Chinese artifacts: to gradually appropriate and claim Chinese clothing as Korean
@tpshfl However, the reality is that South Korea's arbitrary misappropriation of Chinese cultural relics demonstrates that South Koreans consider themselves the center of the world and believe they can plunder other countries' cultures at will. #culturalappropriation
all these Chinese artifacts are unearthed in China, and have absolutely NO relation to Korean Hanbok. Stop claiming other countries’ culture which doesn’t belong to Korea as Korean.
#Hanfu#hanbok#culturalappropriation
@LBRT7692 But the current situation is that Koreans, without any evidence, have arbitrarily appropriated Chinese relics to recreate ‘Korean clothing’, claiming other countries' cultures belong to them(which is actually not), this is truly wrong, arrogant, and ultranationalistic.
@swansongblues It is a fact that Chinese culture was forcibly seized and renamed by South Koreans. This book, which misappropriates Chinese cultural relics, is the most compelling evidence of this. #Hanfu
After misappropriating Chinese culture and artifacts, Koreans not only feel no shame, but instead proudly attack and insult the Chinese victims. This reflects typical behavior of South Korean nationalists. 👍🏻 Thank you for exposing the true face of South Koreans.
#Korea#hanbok
@ten_thousand33 These Chinese clothing artifacts are all unearthed in China, and have absolutely nothing to do with South Korea. Or do you South Koreans think you can claim Chinese artifacts as your own without any evidence? #hanfu
@leeanton35@wdnmdnmsl2333@hanbok_duckjil Your fellow Koreans are deliberately claiming that the Chinese clothing relics unearthed in China is Korean clothing. If you insist you did not steal anything, please urge your fellow Koreans to STOP appropriating Chinese culture
#hanfu