A Starbucks in central Seoul made headlines this week when it closed its doors for a mandatory staff history lesson, following a furious backlash from British expatriates and social media users over an alleged slight to the UK. The incident, which began as a minor customer complaint, quickly spiralled into a diplomatic row and exposed the raw cultural nerves beneath the surface of globalisation.
The trouble started when a British customer, visiting the branch near Gwanghwamun Square, noticed a promotional display for a new “Royal Tea Latte” that featured a Union Jack alongside a caption referencing the Japanese occupation of Korea. The caption, translated from Korean, read: “A taste of empire: the tea that ruled the world.” To the customer, the phrase seemed to glorify British colonialism. Within hours, a Facebook post accusing the coffee chain of “imperialist nostalgia” had gone viral in British expat circles, drawing comments from Seoul-based diplomats and even a light-hearted tweet from the British embassy.
But the real explosion came when a Korean barista reportedly responded to a complaint with: “You British should know all about ruling, shouldn’t you?” The remark, caught on a customer’s phone, spread across Korean social media, where it was shared by thousands who saw it as a legitimate criticism of Britain’s colonial past. The hashtag #StarbucksSeoul began trending, with users posting historical comparisons and demanding a boycott.
Starbucks Korea acted swiftly. The following day, the branch was closed for two hours while all staff attended a “cultural sensitivity training session” that included a lecture on British-Korean relations and the history of colonialism. A company spokesperson said the move was “to ensure our partners understand the context of our promotions and the diverse backgrounds of our customers.” The training, led by a local historian, covered the East India Company, the Opium Wars, and the postwar relationship between Britain and South Korea. Staff were then required to write a short reflection on how to handle similar complaints.
The closure sparked a heated debate in South Korean media. Conservative commentators accused Starbucks of kowtowing to “Western sensitivity,” while progressives argued that the company should have anticipated the backlash. “This is what happens when you commodify history without understanding it,” said Professor Kim Min-jee of Seoul National University, in an interview with the Korea Herald. “The Union Jack isn’t just a pretty pattern. It means different things to different people.”
What strikes me, as an observer of social trends, is not the corporate panic but the speed at which a minor cross-cultural misunderstanding became a referendum on national identity. In the past, such a row would have fizzled out. Today, in our hyperconnected world, a misplaced caption can trigger a global debate within hours. The British expat who started the furore later said she ‘didn’t mean to cause this much trouble.’ The Korean barista has not been publicly identified, but social media users have called for her to be fired, while others have defended her right to free speech.
This is the human cost of globalisation: we are forced to confront our histories at the checkout counter. The real question is whether these mandatory history lessons will actually teach us anything, or whether they are just another way for corporations to manage risk. For the staff at that Seoul Starbucks, it was an unexpected afternoon of learning. For the rest of us, it is a reminder that in a world where cultures collide, we are all students.








