In parallel, changing urban paradigms and wishes for ‘modernity’ are triggering supposedly fashionable urban appearance, leading to an increasing grade of uniformity. Urbanisation, economic development, changing lifestyles and increasingly also natural hazards are altering cities all around Asia. In this context, I stress the importance of influential agents for successful heritagisation. I argue that while South Korea began investing more meaningfully in sports heritage since the early 2000s, Um was forgotten primarily because another athlete, Sohn Kee-chung, occupied the representative spot of the ‘sports hero of the colonial period’. The discussion revolves around tracing when, why, and how South Korea began paying much more attention to sports heritage, and, in light of the findings, it analyzes Um’s forgetfulness in the process. By exploring this phenomenon the paper opens up a discussion on sports heroes and their place in heritagisation, and it contributes to the relatively scant scholarship on sports heritage.
Scholarly works in English on Um are non-existent. There are barely any commemorative initiatives for him and hardly any Korean-language academic works on him. In post-colonial South Korea, however, Um was nearly completely forgotten. He beat Japanese rivals and inspired his fellow compatriots, becoming their source of pride at a difficult era. Cyclist Um Bok-dong (1892–1951), nicknamed ‘Bicycle king of the East’, was the biggest Korean sports hero from the 1910s and into the 1920s, a time when Korea was subjected to Japanese colonial rule (1910–1945).