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BTS

BTS (Korean방탄소년단; RRBangtan Sonyeondan; lit. Bulletproof Boy Scouts), also known as the Bangtan Boys, is a South Korean boy band formed in 2010. The band consists of Jin, Suga, J-Hope, RM, Jimin, V, and Jungkook, who co-write or co-produce much of their material. Originally a hip hop group, they expanded their musical style to incorporate a wide range of genres, while their lyrics have focused on subjects including mental health, the troubles of school-age youth and coming of age, loss, the journey towards self-love, individualism, and the consequences of fame and recognition. Their discography and adjacent work has also referenced literature, philosophy and psychology, and includes an alternate universe storyline.

For other uses, see BTS (disambiguation).

BTS

  • Bangtan Boys
  • Bangtan Sonyeondan
  • Beyond the Scene
  • Bulletproof Boy Scouts

Seoul, South Korea

2013–present

Bangtan Sonyeondan

Bangtan Sonyeondan

Pangt'an Sonyǒndan

防弾少年団

ぼうだんしょうねんだん

Bōdan Shōnendan

Bōdan Shōnendan

Bôdan Syônendan

BTS debuted in 2013 under Big Hit Entertainment with the single album 2 Cool 4 Skool. BTS released their first Korean and Japanese-language studio albums, Dark & Wild and Wake Up respectively, in 2014. The group's second Korean studio album, Wings (2016), was their first to sell one million copies in South Korea. By 2017, BTS had crossed into the global music market and led the Korean Wave into the United States, becoming the first Korean ensemble to receive a Gold certification from the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) for their single "Mic Drop", as well as the first act from South Korea to top the Billboard 200 with their studio album Love Yourself: Tear (2018). In 2020, BTS became one of the few groups since the Beatles (in 1966–1968) to chart four US number-one albums in less than two years, with Love Yourself: Answer (2018) becoming the first Korean album certified Platinum by the RIAA; in the same year, they also became the first all-South Korean act to reach number one on both the Billboard Hot 100 and Billboard Global 200 with their Grammy-nominated single "Dynamite". Follow-up releases "Savage Love", "Life Goes On", "Butter", and "Permission to Dance" made them the fastest act to earn four US number-one singles since Justin Timberlake in 2006.


As of 2023, BTS is the best-selling musical act in South Korean history according to the Circle Chart, having sold in excess of 40 million albums.[2] Their studio album Map of the Soul: 7 (2020) is the fourth best-selling album of all time in South Korea, as well as the first in the country to surpass both four and five million registered sales. They are the first non-English-speaking and Asian act to sell out concerts at Wembley Stadium and the Rose Bowl (Love Yourself World Tour, 2019), and were named the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry's (IFPI) Global Recording Artist of the Year for both 2020 and 2021. The group's accolades include multiple American Music Awards, Billboard Music Awards, Golden Disc Awards, and nominations for five Grammy Awards. Outside of music, they have addressed three sessions of the United Nations General Assembly and partnered with UNICEF in 2017 to establish the Love Myself anti-violence campaign. Featured on Time's international cover as "Next Generation Leaders" and dubbed the "Princes of Pop", BTS has also appeared on Time's lists of the 25 most influential people on the internet (2017–2019) and the 100 most influential people in the world (2019), and in 2018 became the youngest recipients of the South Korean Order of Cultural Merit for their contributions in spreading the Korean culture and language.


On June 14, 2022, the group announced a scheduled pause in group activities to enable the members to complete their 18 months of mandatory South Korean military service, with a reunion planned for 2025.[3] Jin, the oldest member, enlisted on December 13, 2022; the others followed in 2023.

Name

BTS stands for the Korean phrase Bangtan Sonyeondan (Korean: 방탄소년단; Hanja: 防彈少年團), which translates literally to 'Bulletproof Boy Scouts'. According to member J-Hope, the name signifies the group's desire "to block out stereotypes, criticisms, and expectations that aim on adolescents like bullets".[4][5] In Japan, they are known as Bōdan Shōnendan (防弾少年団).[6] In July 2017, BTS announced that their name would also stand for "Beyond the Scene" as part of their new brand identity.[7] This extended the meaning of their name to encompass the idea of growth "from a boy to an adult who opens the doors that are facing forward".[8]

Jin () – vocalist

[405]

Suga (슈가) – rapper

[406]

J-Hope (제이홉) – rapper

[407]

RM (알앰) – leader, rapper

[408]

Jimin (지민) – vocalist

[409]

V () – vocalist

[410]

Jungkook (정국) – vocalist

[411]

(2018)

Burn the Stage: The Movie

(2019)

Love Yourself in Seoul

(2019)

Bring the Soul: The Movie

(2020)

Break the Silence: The Movie

(2022)

BTS: Permission to Dance on Stage – LA

BTS: Yet to Come in Cinemas (2023)

Films


Online shows

(2023)

Beyond the Story

(2014–2015)[412][413]

The Red Bullet Tour

(2015)[414][415][416]

Wake Up: Open Your Eyes Japan Tour

(2015–2016)[417]

The Most Beautiful Moment in Life On Stage Tour

(2017)[418]

The Wings Tour

(2018–2019)[419][420]

Love Yourself World Tour

(2020; cancelled)

Map of the Soul Tour

(2021–2022)

Permission to Dance on Stage

Anderson, Crystal S. (2020). Soul in Seoul: African American Popular Music and K-pop. University Press of Mississippi.  978-1-4968-3009-8.

ISBN

Hunt, Robert; McKelvey, Fenwick (2019). . Journal of Information Policy. 9: 307–335. doi:10.5325/jinfopoli.9.2019.0307. JSTOR 10.5325/jinfopoli.9.2019.0307. S2CID 213521720.

"Algorithmic Regulation in Media and Cultural Policy: A Framework to Evaluate Barriers to Accountability"

Jin, Dal Yong (2022). "Transnational Cultural Power of BTS: Digital Fan Activism in the Social Media Era". In Kim, Youna (ed.). The Soft Power of the Korean Wave: Parasite, BTS and Drama. Routledge. pp. 142–154.  978-1-00310-248-9.

ISBN

Ju, Hyunshik. . Popular Entertainment Studies: 19–33. ISSN 1837-9303. Archived from the original on March 21, 2022. Retrieved June 7, 2022.

"Premediating a Narrative of Growth: BTS, Digital Media, and Fan Culture"

Keith, Sarah (2022). "BTS as Cultural Ambassadors". In Kim, Youna (ed.). The Soft Power of the Korean Wave: Parasite, BTS and Drama. Routledge. pp. 152–167.  978-1-00310-248-9.

ISBN

Kim, Kyung Hyun (2021). Hegemonic Mimicry: Korean Popular Culture of the Twenty-first Century. Duke University Press.  978-1-4780-1358-7.

ISBN

Kim, Kyung Hyun (2022). "BTS and the World Music Industry". In Kim, Youna (ed.). The Soft Power of the Korean Wave: Parasite, BTS and Drama. Routledge. pp. 107–117.  978-1-00310-248-9.

ISBN

Kim, Youna (2022). "Introduction: Popular Culture and Soft Power in the Social Media Age". In Kim, Youna (ed.). The Soft Power of the Korean Wave: Parasite, BTS and Drama. Routledge. pp. 1–38.  978-1-00310-248-9.

ISBN

Kim, Young-dae (2019a). BTS–The Review: A Comprehensive Look at the Music of BTS. Translated by H.J. Chung. RH Korea.  978-8-925-56582-8.

ISBN

Lie, John (2022). "BTS, the Highest Stage of K-Pop". In Kim, Youna (ed.). The Soft Power of the Korean Wave: Parasite, BTS and Drama. Routledge. pp. 118–128.  978-1-00310-248-9.

ISBN

Quessard, Maud (2020). "Entertainment Diplomacy". In Balzacq, Thierry; Charillon, Frédéric; Ramel, Frédéric (eds.). . Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 279–296. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-28786-3_21. ISBN 978-3-03028-785-6. S2CID 211355635.

Global Diplomacy: An Introduction to the Theory and Practice

Shapiro, Marc (2018). Burn the Stage: The Rise of BTS and Korean Boy Bands. Riverdale Avenue Books.  978-1-62601-490-9.

ISBN

Sprinkel, Katy (2021). BTS: One. Triumph Books.  978-1-64125-643-8.

ISBN

Suk-Young Kim, ed. (2023). "Part V: The Band That Surprised the World". The Cambridge Companion to K-Pop. Cambridge: . ISBN 978-1-108-94478-6.

Cambridge University Press

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