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Lee, Kwansoo. The Criticism of Capitalism in How to Get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia: Parody, Narrative, and Love Story. Studies in English Language & Literature 44.2 (2018): 127-148. This study aims to analyze the text of How to Get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia as a pseudo-self-help book by examining the novels parody, narrative, and a love story which converge on the criticism of capitalism. The plot develops in parody, the form of a pseudo-self-help book, resulting in irony by the contradiction between the form and the story. The parody and irony ultimately criticize the circumstances from which self-help books were born, which are the economic instability and the capitalism/new-liberalism. The narrator intentionally induces the readers to be conscious of the novels being a pseudo-self-help book while the address you forces them to identify themselves with the protagonist in the text. The readers recognize this novels pretence of a self-help book, and in turn, disillusion themselves from being immersed in the text. These recognition and disillusion repeat from the beginning to the end of the novel. Through this repetition, the readers experience the parody and irony in the status of the protagonist. Regarding a love story, the novel focuses on a couple who are eager to get filthy rich. You and a pretty girl remain to be theoretical objects of love to each other because they place the material success on their priority in life. This love story represents the individuals desire to be rich under the influence of capitalism/neo-liberalism. (Kunsan College of Nursing)

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