Please note this is NOT a ZOOM Lecture but an in person lecture. Tickets include a complimentary glass of Devil’s Botany Chocolate Absinthe. Doors open at 6:30pm and talk starts at 7pm

K-Pop Demon Hunters: Women, Spirits, and Korea’s Occult Traditions with Melanie Hyo-In Han

Inspired by the Netflix original film K-Pop Demon Hunters, this illustrated talk uses the movie as a gateway into Korea’s spiritual landscape.

The film’s vision of song as sorcery and female warriors battling unseen forces draws directly from musok, Korea’s indigenous shamanic tradition. For centuries, mudang—predominantly women—have worked with spirits through ritual music, dance, and performance to heal, protect, and negotiate with the unseen world. In K-Pop Demon Hunters, these practices are reimagined as pop spectacle, where music becomes a weapon and performance becomes ritual.

In this lecture, Melanie Hyo-In Han explores how musok and mudang traditions—often misunderstood or marginalised—inform the film’s imagery, narrative, and worldview. Moving beyond the screen, the talk situates these practices within a living tradition shaped by women’s spiritual authority, the disruptions of Japanese colonisation, and the pressures of modernisation.

Blending historical insight, cultural critique, and rich visual material, K-Pop Demon Hunters: Women, Spirits, and Korea’s Occult Traditions offers audiences a deeper understanding of Korean spirits, ritual song, and female power—revealing how ancient occult lineages continue to resurface in contemporary global culture.

Melanie Hyo-In Han

Born in Korea and raised in East Africa, Melanie Hyo-In Han recently moved from the U.S. to the U.K. She is the author of Passing Notes in Secret (boats against the current), Abecedarian: Banff, Canada (kith books), My Dear Yeast (Milk & Cake Press), and Sandpaper Tongue, Parchment Lips (Finishing Line Press).Currently, she is finishing her PhD in Creative Writing at the University of Surrey, where she teaches undergraduate seminars in the School of Literature and Languages. She also serves as the Co-Editor-in-Chief of Flora Fiction and the Two Languages Prize Editor at Gasher Press. Learn more at melaniehan.com.

The Absinthe Parlour at The Last Tuesday Society is London’s best award-winning alternative cocktail bar hidden within The Viktor Wynd Museum of Curiosities. A drinker’s cabinet of wonder filled curious cocktails & extraordinary elixirs —The Last Tuesday Society’s Absinthe Parlour is truly a hidden treasure of East London. Opened by collectors, drinks historians & absinthe experts — Allison Crawbuck (Brooklyn) & Rhys Everett (London) in 2016, the duo bring with them a shared passion for the mysterious world of spirits & the macabre.

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Devil’s Botany is the UK’s first absinthe distillery, founded by Directors of The Last Tuesday Society’s Absinthe Parlour. Celebrating spirit’s connection to art, literature, magic & mixology, Devil’s Botany is unleashing the future of absinthe with bold expressions for the adventurous drinkers of today.

The venue opens at 18:30. Doors will close at 19:00 to avoid disrupting the speaker. We kindly ask that all guests arrive before 19:00. Refunds are not possible for in person events with less than seven days notice in any circumstances.

18:30 - 20:30
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