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www.groovekorea.com / May 2014 64 Edited by Elaine Ramirez (elaine@groovekorea.com) INSIGHT ment. In the public sector, slightly more than  42 percent are female employees,” Minister  Cho said at the conference at Asan Institute.  With issues like this, feminism and fighting  for gender equality may seem like far-off revo- lutionary causes detached from women’s daily  hurdles.  “Women in Korea can be very passive, like  other women in Asia,” says up-and-coming  photographer Jung “Julia” Ji-hyun. “Of course,  nowadays women are very powerful and vocal,  but those powerful women are facing negative  sentiment among people in general.”  Jung lived briefly in Australia and recogniz- es the depth of Korea’s strict social expecta- tions of women. “People in Australia look at  me more as I am, I guess. Koreans seem to  be very judgmental,” she says. “The status of  women in Korea now isn’t actually bad. But  they expect or want women to be womanly  and feminine, to be more complacent.”  Jung believes that she lives in a country  where being a woman means conforming  to social expectations. She says that most  women’s ambition is to get married. With the  endless array of cosmetic and plastic surgery  advertisements, everything they do seems like  it is to achieve the goal of marriage, she says.  With such ideas ingrained in women’s minds  from a young age, Jung is uncertain about  what could ign ite a feminist revolution. She  believes women need a major change of  mindset to empower them to fight for gender  equality.  “I hope women in Korea do not give a shit  about what other people think about them,  and I want them to think that marriage is not  the goal of their lives. Be more idealistic.”  Jung does believe that change will eventual- ly happen. “Slowly, though, after my parents’  generation passes away. Korea is a very fam- ily-oriented society and family pressure is a  really big thing.”