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Cleanest Race How North Koreans See Themselves And Why It Matters Reprint B R Myers

  • SKU: BELL-2395876
Cleanest Race How North Koreans See Themselves And Why It Matters Reprint B R Myers
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

5.0

48 reviews

Cleanest Race How North Koreans See Themselves And Why It Matters Reprint B R Myers instant download after payment.

Publisher: Melville House Publishing
File Extension: PDF
File size: 4.21 MB
Pages: 203
Author: B. R. Myers
ISBN: 9781935554349, 1935554344
Language: English
Year: 2011
Edition: Reprint

Product desciption

Cleanest Race How North Koreans See Themselves And Why It Matters Reprint B R Myers by B. R. Myers 9781935554349, 1935554344 instant download after payment.

Understanding North Korea through its propagandaA newly revised and updated edition that includes a consideration of Kim Jung Il's successor, Kim Jong-On What do the North Koreans really believe? How do they see themselves and the world around them? Here B.R. Myers, a North Korea analyst and a contributing editor of The Atlantic, presents the first full-length study of the North Korean worldview. Drawing on extensive research into the regime’s domestic propaganda, including films, romance novels and other artifacts of the personality cult, Myers analyzes each of the country’s official myths in turn—from the notion of Koreans’ unique moral purity, to the myth of an America quaking in terror of “the Iron General.” In a concise but groundbreaking historical section, Myers also traces the origins of this official culture back to the Japanese fascist thought in which North Korea’s first ideologues were schooled. What emerges is a regime completely unlike the West’s perception of it. This is neither a bastion of Stalinism nor a Confucian patriarchy, but a paranoid nationalist, “military-first” state on the far right of the ideological spectrum. Since popular support for the North Korean regime now derives almost exclusively from pride in North Korean military might, Pyongyang can neither be cajoled nor bullied into giving up its nuclear program. The implications for US foreign policy—which has hitherto treated North Korea as the last outpost of the Cold War—are as obvious as they are troubling. With North Korea now calling for a “blood reckoning” with the “Yankee jackals,” Myers’s unprecedented analysis could not be more timely.

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