"In Flower of Capitalism, Olga Fedorenko offers a multisited ethnography of South Korean advertising. Against scholarly approaches that universalize the function of advertising as a predictable element of capitalism, she insists on the historical and situational specificity of advertising’s role and function, and the social expectations placed upon it, in different contexts." —Robert M. Oppenheim, The University of Texas at Austin"South Korea evinced a precocious interest in noncommercial and public service advertising: in the wake of its devastating war, the market became the medium of all public communication partly because preexisting social ties were so badly ruptured. Fedorenko offers us a compelling catalogue both of how advertising takes shape and how it is interpreted in the militarized modernity of post-Cold War South Korea." —Arvind Rajagopal, New York University