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Propaganda in North Korea

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Surtitles at a Korean revolutionary opera

Propaganda is widely used and produced by the government of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (North Korea). Most propaganda is based on the Juche ideology, veneration of the ruling Kim family, the promotion of the Workers' Party of Korea,[1] and hostilities against both the Republic of Korea and the United States.

The first syllable of Juche, "ju", means the man; the second syllable, "che", means body of oneself.[2] Article 3 of the Socialist Constitution proclaims, "The DPRK is guided in its activities by the Juche idea, a world outlook centered on people, a revolutionary ideology for achieving the independence of the masses of people."[3]

Many pictures of the supreme leaders are posted throughout the country.[4]

Themes

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Cult of personality

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Kim Il-sung with Kim Jong-il on Mount Paektu

North Korean propaganda was crucial to the formation and promotion of the cult of personality centered around the founder of the DPRK, Kim Il Sung.[5] The Soviet Union used propaganda to develop a cult of personality around Kim, particularly as a Korean resistance fighter, as soon as they put him in power.[6] This quickly surpassed its Eastern European models.[7] Instead of depicting his actual residence in a Soviet village during the war with the Japanese, he was claimed to have fought a guerrilla war from the Paektusan Secret Camp.[8]

Once relations with the Soviet Union were broken off, their role was expurgated, as were all other nationalists, until the claim was made that Kim founded the Communist Party in North Korea.[9] He is seldom shown in action during the Korean War, instead, soldiers are depicted as inspired by him.[10] Subsequently, many stories are recounted of his "on-the-spot guidance" in various locations, many of them being openly presented as fictional.[11]

This was supplemented with propaganda on behalf of his son, Kim Jong Il.[12] The North Korean famine of the 1990s, referred to as a "food shortage" by DPRK propaganda, produced anecdotes of Kim insisting on eating the same meager food as other North Koreans.[13]

Propaganda efforts began for the "Young General", Kim Jong Un,[14] who succeeded him as the paramount leader of North Korea on Kim Jong Il's death in December 2011.

Foreign relations

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Paintings on the walls of the Sinchon Museum of American War Atrocities depict alleged atrocities carried out by American soldiers during the Korean War.

Early propaganda, in the 1940s, presented a positive Soviet–Korean relationship, often depicting Russians as maternal figures to childlike Koreans.[15] As soon as relations were less cordial, they were expurgated from historical accounts.[9] The collapse of the USSR, without a shot, is often depicted with intense contempt in sources not accessible to Russians.[16]

Americans are depicted particularly negatively.[17] They are presented as an inherently evil race, with whom hostility is the only possible relationship.[18] The Korean War is used as a source for atrocities, less for the bombing raids than on charges of massacre.[19] June 25 is considered the start of "Struggle Against US Imperialism Month" (informally called "Hate America Month" in the U.S. media), which is commemorated by anti-U.S. mass rallies at Kim Il Sung Square in the capital Pyongyang.[20] In 2018, these rallies were cancelled in what the Associated Press called "another sign of detente following the summit between leader Kim Jong Un and U.S. President Donald Trump" that same year.[21]

Japan is frequently depicted as rapacious and dangerous, both in the colonial era and afterward. North Korean propaganda frequently highlighted the danger of Japanese remilitarization.[22] At the same time, the intensity of anti-Japanese propaganda underwent repeated fluctuations, depending on the improvement or deterioration of Japanese-DPRK relations. In those periods when North Korea was on better terms with Japan than with South Korea, North Korean propaganda essentially ignored the Liancourt Rocks dispute. However, if Pyongyang felt threatened by Japanese–South Korean rapprochement or sought to cooperate with Seoul against Tokyo, the North Korean media promptly raised the issue, with the aim of causing friction in Japanese–ROK relations.[23]

Israelis are also depicted negatively. In North Korean propaganda, they are presented as a group of terrorists with Israel's conflicts with its neighbors and Iran are usually mentioned.[24][25]

Friendly nations are depicted almost exclusively as tributary nations.[26] The English journalist Christopher Hitchens pointed out in the essay "A Nation of Racist Dwarfs" that propaganda has a blatantly racist and nationalistic angle:[27]

North Korean women who return pregnant from China—the regime's main ally and protector—are forced to submit to abortions. Wall posters and banners depicting all Japanese as barbarians are only equaled by the ways in which Americans are caricatured as hook-nosed monsters.[27]

South Korea

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A North Korean propaganda poster-wall promoting Korean reunification in the near-future, declaring, "Let Us Pass Down A United Country To The Next Generation!". This is located in the North Korean side of the Korean Demilitarized Zone (DMZ).

South Korea was originally depicted as a poverty-stricken land which was run by harsh and cruel dictators backed by the US and where American soldiers based there shot and slaughtered Korean women and children, but by the 1990s, too much information reached North Korea to prevent their learning that South Korea had a much stronger economy and higher living standards and quality of life, including political and social freedom, and as a result, North Korean propaganda admitted to it.[28]

"Military first"

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Songun, or "military first", propaganda

Under Kim Jong Il, a major theme was the need of Kim to attend to the military first of all (in North Korea, this policy is called Songun), which required other Koreans to do without his close attention. This was a shift from the former policy of economic reform and diplomatic engagement.[29] This military life is presented as something that Koreans take spontaneously to, though often disobeying orders from the highest of motives.[30] The diplomatic offensive had failed to yield a normalization of relations with Japan. Meanwhile, relations with Russia remain cold and China was applying direct pressure on Pyongyang, thereby changing the dynamic of the long-standing relationship between the two erstwhile allies.[29]

Devotion to the state

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Romance is often depicted in stories as being triggered solely by the person's model citizenship, as when a beautiful woman is unattractive until a man learns she volunteered to work at a potato farm.[31]

Social control

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The capital city of North Korea has witnessed notable social control since Kim Il Sung's rule, and during as well as after Kim Jong Il's rule. The aerial bombardment of North Korean population centers inflicted the greatest loss of civilian life in the Korean War, which the North Koreans have claimed ever since was America's greatest war crime. Communist Party of Vietnam (CPV) soldiers helped rebuild bridges, elementary schools, factories, and apartments. In February 1955, the 47th Brigade of the CPV rebuilt the Pyongyang Electric Train Factory.[32]

The city's reconstruction was supervised by Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il.[2] The DPRK, led by Kim Il Sung and supported by the Soviets, was left with a scene of complete and utter destruction; with the exception of a handful of buildings Pyongyang had been completely flattened. For a young general with socialist ideals, this was seen as a clean slate, on top of which a new country, both physically and ideologically, could be built.[33]

Kim Jong Il favored grand scale buildings and monuments. The giant pyramid of the Ryugyong Hotel building, originally scheduled for completion in time for the 13th World Festival of Youth and Students in 1989, is 105 stories tall. Work on the structure stopped in the early 1990s due to structural defects. The monuments dedicated to Kim Il Sung were not made to be habitable, rather, they need only to look grand. A twenty-meter bronze statue of Kim Il Sung, arm outstretched to encompass his city, sits atop Mansu Hill [ko]. Throughout the 1990's, Kim Jong Il had his late father's Kumsusan Palace extensively renovated to house the Great Leader's remains, hiring Russian specialists to embalm the corpse for permanent display.[2] The planning of Pyongyang was unique. It was laid out in a highly symmetrical pattern. Massive, concrete structures are erected with a harmony of pastels. They did not possess the technology to construct any other type of buildings. An example of this is the pyramidal Ryugyong Hotel.[34] There were no advertisements except political banners and portraits of the two Kims.[2] There is very little traffic in the city, allowing for safe road crossing for pedestrians. Technology is in intentionally short supply in Pyongyang.[2] Cell phones, the intranet, and the Internet are a service reserved for those in power. Internet access in North Korea is restricted to a small section of government and business officials who have received state approval, and to foreigners living in Pyongyang. In the absence of a broadband network, the only option is through satellite internet coverage which is available in some tourist hotels.[35] Mobile phone use was banned in 2004, but service was re-introduced in 2008, jointly operated by the Egyptian Orascom company and the state-owned Korea Post and Telecommunications Corporation. According to the Daily NK website, the new service, despite its cost, proved popular among affluent party members in Pyongyang.[36]

Women in North Korea

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Women playing nurses in the North Korean opera A True Daughter of the Party

The cultural identity of North Korea was deeply rooted in Confucian tradition and intractable Confucian family traditions. Women's identity is seen through the prism of familial relationships. It became a primary aspect of women's lives irrespective of prevalent political regime or social circumstances. Women were considered angels which men had to protect.[37] Women in representative propaganda productions, such as Sea of Blood and The Flower Girl, became not only the focal point of visual composition within the traditional family structure but also the agents of ideological awakening for the newly founded socialist state.[38] Revolutionary operas and numerous other productions depicted as well as forged the new gender order within the structure of the imagined family, which gained supremacy over blood ties. The imagined family was deemed by the degree of commitment to ideological and political struggle, which separated the people from the enemy. Thus, imagining a family was perceived as a process of liberating women and motivating them to have a larger social presence.[39] The colonial experience under occupation by the Japanese, who were traditionally despised as "barbarians," propelled Koreans to evaluate their weakness vis-à-vis the concrete threat to their national sovereignty. Women's backwardness was regarded as directly related to national weakness. In light of their nation's fragile future, Koreans thought women's backwardness to stem from the traditional family life, one of the most ancient institutions in Korean society.[37] Women joined the labor front upon the outbreak of the Korean War. As manpower was concentrated on warfare, industry and agriculture were left to women's care. But even after the war, the North Korean leadership urged women to continue participating actively in the reconstruction of society. The practical social demand created the need for a female labor force and thus women's emancipation from the domestic sphere was legitimized under the pretext of achieving gender equality. As Hunter points out: "In 1947, only 5 percent of industrial workers were women; by 1949, the number had jumped to 15 percent. By 1967, women accounted for almost half of the total workforce."[37] North Korea is a fashion-conscious nation where political leaders strive to dress its people through rigid regulations, imposing uniforms on various social sectors and systematically recommending certain designs to civilians. Some other socialist and authoritarian states glorified masculine clothing as a preferred means to represent revolutionized women. Contrarily, North Korean fashion has continuously expressed degrees of femininity, contradicting the astringent revolutionary spirit often identified with masculinity.[37]

Food shortage

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The North Korean famine was admitted within propaganda to be solely a food shortage, ascribed to bad weather and failure to implement Kim's teachings, but unquestionably better than situations outside North Korea.[40]

The government urged the use of non-nutritious and even harmful "food substitutes" such as sawdust.[41]

Practices

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Propaganda poster

Every year, a state-owned publishing house, Gold Star Printing Press[42] releases several cartoons (called geurim-chaek (Korean그림책) in North Korea), many of which are smuggled across the Chinese border and, sometimes, end up in university libraries in the United States. The books are designed to instill the Juche philosophy of Kim Il Sung (the "father" of North Korea)—radical self-reliance of the state. The plots mostly feature scheming capitalists from the United States and Japan who create dilemmas for naïve North Korean characters.

The propaganda in North Korea is controlled mainly by the Propaganda and Agitation Department of the Workers' Party of Korea.[43]

Posters and slogans

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Posters depict the correct actions for every part of life, down to appropriate clothing.[17] North Korean propaganda posters are very similar to the messages portrayed by socialist countries. North Korean propaganda posters focus on military might, utopian society and devotion to the state, and the leader's personality.[44] Slogans are similar to that of Maoist China, containing calls to action and praises for the leadership.[45][46]

Art

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Propaganda poster in a primary school at the Chongsan-ri Farm

Fine art often depicts militaristic themes.[47] The Flower Girl, a revolutionary opera allegedly penned by Kim Il Sung himself, was turned into a movie, the most popular one in North Korea.[48] It depicts its heroine's sufferings in the colonial era until her partisan brother returns to exact vengeance on their oppressive landlord, at which point she pledges support for the revolution.[49]

Music

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The country's supreme leaders have had hymns dedicated to them that served as their signature tune and were repetitively broadcast by the state media:

Film

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North Korea has a prolific propaganda film industry.[50]

The North Korean government also runs a film industry. North Korean movies depict the glory of North Korean life and the atrocities of Western Imperialism, with a key role of providing on-screen role models.[51] The film industry is run through Pyongyang University of Cinematic and Dramatic Arts.[52] Kim Jong Il was a self-proclaimed genius of film.[52] In 1973, he authored On the Art of the Cinema, a treatise on film theory and filmmaking.[53] He was rumored to own over 20,000 DVDs in his personal collection. Kim believed that cinema was the most important of the arts. Domestically, these films are given lavish receptions. International critics cite the films as propaganda, because of their unreal depictions of North Korea.[54] Recently, there has been an increase in animated films. The animated films carry political and military messages aimed at the youth of North Korea.[51]

Leaflets

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The North Korean government is known for dropping propaganda leaflets to South Korean soldiers, just across the Demilitarized Zone. The leaflets are dropped across in a floating balloon. The leaflets criticize the South Korean government and praise North Korea.[55]

Social media

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North Korea made its first entry into the social media market in 2010. The country has launched its own website,[56] Facebook page,[56] YouTube channel,[57][58][59] Twitter account,[58] and Flickr page.[60] The profile picture of all social media accounts, according to the official Korean Central News Agency, is the Three Charters for National Reunification Memorial Tower, a 30 metres (98 ft) monument in Pyongyang that "reflects the strong will of the 70 million Korean people to achieve the reunification of the country with their concerted effort."[56]

Uriminzokkiri

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Uriminzokkiri is a website that provides Korean-language news and propaganda from North Korea's central news agency. The website offers translation in Korean, Russian, Chinese, Japanese, and English.[61] Uriminzokkiri means 'on our own as our nation'.[62] The site includes articles entitled "South Korea's Pro-US/Japan Corporate Media: Endless Demonization Campaigns Against DPRK", "The Project for New American Century: The New World Order & The US's Continued CRIMES" and "Kim Jong-un Sends Musical Instruments to Children's Palaces". The website also contains a page for tv.urminzokkiri. This page contains videos showing news clips criticizing imperialist movements, clips showing the bravery of Korean people and the power of its military.[63]

Facebook

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The North Korean Facebook account, also titled Uriminzokkiri, appeared a week after the South Korean government blocked the North Korean Twitter account.[56] The page represents "the intentions of North and South Koreas and compatriots abroad, who wish for peace, prosperity, and unification of our homeland". There were over 50 posts on Uriminzokkiri's wall, including links to reports that criticize South Korea and the U.S. as "warmongers", photos of picturesque North Korean landscapes and a YouTube video of a dance performance celebrating leader Kim Jong Il, "guardian of the homeland and creator of happiness".[64]

YouTube

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The channel named Uriminzokkiri was opened in July 2010.[57] It has uploaded over 11,000 videos, including clips that condemn and mock South Korea and the U.S. for blaming North Korea for the sinking of a South Korean warship in March 2010. The account has posted videos dubbing United States Secretary of State Hillary Clinton a "Maniac in a Skirt".[65] The account had over 3,000 subscribers and over 3.3 million views as of 28 November 2012;[57] by early 2015, numbers had grown to over 11,000 subscribers and more than 11 million views.[66] On 5 February 2013, a propaganda film that featured New York in flames was blocked and then taken down after Activision pointed out that the video used copyrighted footage from Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3.[67] The channel was shut down in 2017.

Twitter

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The government's official Twitter account is also named Uriminzok ('Our race'). It gained 8,500 followers in the first week.[56] As of 28 November 2012, the account had almost 11,000 followers and had sent out almost 5,000 tweets;[68] by early 2015, the account had sent almost 13,000 messages and had close to 20,000 followers.[69] In January 2011, the Korean-language account was hacked and featured messages calling for North Korean citizens to start an uprising.[70] In April 2013, the country's Twitter account was hacked by the online activist group Anonymous.[71]

Flickr

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The Flickr account was started in August 2010 and deactivated in April 2013 but is now active from some point in 2017. The site included many pictures of Kim Jong Un receiving applause from the military; children eating, in school, and enjoying life; booming agriculture; and modern city life.[72] The Uriminzokkiri Flickr account was hacked by Anonymous in April 2013, as part of the group's attack on North Korea's social media accounts.[73]

Propaganda village

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Kijong-dong is a village in Pyonghwa-ri, Kaesong-si. It is situated in the North's half of the Korean Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) and is also known in North Korea as "Peace Village" (Korean평화촌; MRP'yŏnghwach'on).

The official position of the North Korean government is that the village contains a 200-family collective farm, serviced by a childcare center, kindergarten, primary and secondary schools, and a hospital. However, observation from South Korea suggests that the town is an uninhabited Potemkin village built at great expense in the 1950s in a propaganda effort to encourage defections from South Korea and to house the DPRK soldiers manning the extensive network of artillery positions, fortifications and underground marshalling bunkers that abut the border zone.[74]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Scobell, Dr. Andrew (July 2005), North Korea's Strategic Intentions, Strategic Studies Institute, U.S. Army War College, archived from the original on 12 April 2010
  2. ^ a b c d e Oh, Kongdan; Hassig, Ralph C. (2004). North Korea through the Looking Glass. Washington, DC: Brookings Institution Press. ISBN 978-0815798200. Retrieved 3 November 2017.
  3. ^ DPRK's Socialist Constitution (Full Text). The People's Korea. 19 September 1998. p. 4. Archived from the original on 28 October 2013.
  4. ^ Szilak, Illya (4 November 2012). "Meeting, Everywhere, The Rulers Of North Korea". The Huffington Post.
  5. ^ "North Korea profile". BBC News Asia. BBC. 14 October 2014.
  6. ^ Becker 2005, p. 51.
  7. ^ Myers 2010, p. 37.
  8. ^ Myers 2010, pp. 36–7.
  9. ^ a b Becker 2005, p. 53.
  10. ^ Myers 2010, pp. 101–2.
  11. ^ Myers 2010, p. 103.
  12. ^ "Chinoy, Mike (1 March 2003). "North Korea's propaganda machine". International CNN: Asia. Panmunjom, South Korea: CNN.
  13. ^ Becker 2005, p. 40.
  14. ^ Myers 2010, p. 65.
  15. ^ Myers 2010, p. 35.
  16. ^ Myers 2010, p. 130.
  17. ^ Myers 2010, p. 135.
  18. ^ Myers 2010, pp. 136–7.
  19. ^ "North Korea celebrates 'Hate America' month". New York Post. Associated Press. 25 June 2015. Retrieved 25 June 2018.
  20. ^ "In sign of detente, North Korea skips annual anti-US rally". AP News. Pyongyang. Associated Press. 25 June 2018. Retrieved 25 June 2018.
  21. ^ Myers 2010, p. 131.
  22. ^ Szalontai, Balázs (Winter 2013). "Instrumental Nationalism? The Dokdo Problem Through the Lens of North Korean Propaganda and Diplomacy". The Journal of Northeast Asian History. 10 (2): 105–162. Archived from the original on 1 September 2014.
  23. ^ "Spokesperson for Foreign Ministry of DPRK Gives Answer". KCNA (via KCNAwatch). Retrieved 2 October 2024.
  24. ^ "N. Korea strongly denounces Israel for attack on Hezbollah". The Korea Times. Retrieved 1 October 2024.
  25. ^ Myers 2010, p. 129–30.
  26. ^ a b Hitchens, Christopher (1 February 2010). "A Nation of Racist Dwarfs: Kim Jong-il's regime is even weirder and more despicable than you thought". Fighting Words. Slate. Retrieved 23 December 2012.
  27. ^ Myers 2010, p. 152.
  28. ^ a b French, Paul (2005). North Korea: The paranoid Peninsula. New York: Zed Books Ltd. p. 216. ISBN 9781842779057. Retrieved 27 October 2017.
  29. ^ Myers 2010, pp. 83–4.
  30. ^ Myers 2010, p. 88.
  31. ^ K. Armstrong, Charles (16 March 2009). "The Destruction and Reconstruction of North Korea, 1950 - 1960". The Asia-Pacific Journal. 7.
  32. ^ Davidson, Alex (6 September 2016). "Architecture is Propaganda: How North Korea Turned the Built Environment into a Tool for Control". ArchDaily. Retrieved 3 November 2017.
  33. ^ Chung, Stephy (15 August 2016). "Why North Korea's capital is the 'perfect science fiction film set'". CNN. Retrieved 3 November 2017.
  34. ^ Thomas Bruce, Scott (28 January 2014). "Information Technology and Social Controls in North Korea" (PDF). Korea Economic Institute of America. Retrieved 3 November 2017.
  35. ^ "North Korea's tightly controlled media". No. Asia Pacific. BBC News. 19 December 2011. Retrieved 3 November 2017.
  36. ^ a b c d Kim, Suk-Young (2010). Illusive Utopia- Theatre, Film and Everyday Performance in North Korea. USA: The University of Michigan Press. ISBN 9780472026890. Retrieved 3 November 2017.
  37. ^ Il-Sung, Kim (1992). With the Century. Pyongyang: Workers' Party of Korea Publishing House.
  38. ^ Park, Kyung Ae (June 1992). "Women and Social Change in South and North Korea: Marxist and Liberal Perspectives". Women and International Development.
  39. ^ Myers 2010, p. 119.
  40. ^ Becker 2005, pp. 36–7.
  41. ^ Hak-rae, Jo (3 February 2009). ""Blizzard in the Jungle" Ri Chol-Geun and Jo Hak-Rae". Words Without Borders. Retrieved 26 September 2024.
  42. ^ Jae-Cheon Lim (2015). Leader Symbols and Personality Cult in North Korea: The Leader State. London: Routledge. p. 10. ISBN 978-1-317-56741-7.
  43. ^ Lai, Lawrence (22 December 2011). "North Korean Propaganda Posters". Picture This: ABC News. ABC News Internet Ventures. Archived from the original on 21 June 2012.
  44. ^ Zwirko, Colin (2020). "'Let's break through the barriers!' North Korea's new political slogans for 2020". NK News.
  45. ^ Johnson, Robert (20 December 2011). "Check Out These Twisted North Korean Propaganda Posters". Business Insider. Business Insider Inc.
  46. ^ Ferris-Rotman, Amie (14 January 2011). "Exhibitions: Art or propaganda? North Korea exhibit in Moscow". Reuters. Moscow, Russia.
  47. ^ Myers 2010, p. 91.
  48. ^ Myers 2010, p. 92.
  49. ^ Getlen, Larry (5 November 2016). "Inside North Korea's bizarre film industry and its American GI star". New York Post. Retrieved 25 October 2020.
  50. ^ a b Gluck, Caroline (11 January 2002). "North Korea's film industry boom". BBC News: Asia-Pacific. BBC.
  51. ^ a b "North Korea's cinema of dreams: 101 East gains rare insight into the beating heart of North Korea's film industry", 101 East, Al Jazeera English, 29 December 2011
  52. ^ Johannes Schönherr (13 August 2012). North Korean Cinema: A History. McFarland. p. 54. ISBN 978-0-7864-6526-2. Retrieved 29 April 2015.
  53. ^ Jones, Sam (16 October 2012). "A Cinematic Revolution: North Korea's Film Industry". AGI (Asian Global Impact). Archived from the original on 24 May 2013.
  54. ^ "North Korea drops propaganda leaflets over border". The Telegraph. AFP. 2 October 2012.
  55. ^ a b c d e Roberts, Laura (21 August 2010). "North Korea joins Facebook: North Korea appears to have joined the social networking site Facebook after its Twitter account was blocked by South Korea under the country's security laws". The Telegraph. Telegraph Media Group.
  56. ^ a b c "uriminzokkiri". YouTube. Archived from the original on 13 July 2017. Retrieved 28 November 2012.
  57. ^ a b Yoon, Sangwon (17 August 2010). "North Korea says it has joined Twitter, YouTube". Seoul, South Korea: Associated Press.
  58. ^ "YouTube blocks North Korean state television channel". BBC. 15 December 2016.
  59. ^ "North Korea's Twitter, flickr accounts hacked amid rising tension". Associated Press. 4 April 2013.
  60. ^ "English". Uriminzokkiri. Archived from the original on 11 January 2015. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
  61. ^ Roberts, Laura (21 August 2010). "North Korea joins Facebook". Telegraph.co.uk. Retrieved 25 May 2020.
  62. ^ "Uriminzokkiri TV" (in Korean). Uriminzokkiri. Archived from the original on 20 January 2013. Retrieved 29 November 2012.
  63. ^ "North Korea Joins Facebook, After Opening Twitter and YouTube Accounts". Seoul, South Korea. Associated Press. 20 August 2010. Archived from the original on 24 February 2021.
  64. ^ Choe Sang-Hun (17 August 2010). "North Korea Takes to Twitter and YouTube". The New York Times (New York ed.). Seoul, South Korea. p. A7.
  65. ^ "uriminzokkiri: About". YouTube. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
  66. ^ "North Korea propaganda taken off YouTube after Activision complaint". BBC News. 6 February 2013.
  67. ^ "uriminzokkiri (uriminzok)". Twitter. Retrieved 28 November 2012.
  68. ^ "uriminzokkiri (@uriminzok)". Twitter. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
  69. ^ "North Korea's Twitter account hacked to call for uprising: The North Korean government's official Twitter account appears to have been hacked, with the feed calling for an uprising to remove the leaders from power". The Telegraph. 8 January 2011.
  70. ^ Rodriguez, Salvador (4 April 2013). "North Korea's Twitter, Flickr accounts hacked; Anonymous speaks up". Los Angeles Times.
  71. ^ "uriminzokkiri's photostream". Flickr. Archived from the original on 20 December 2010.
  72. ^ "Anonymous 'hacks' North Korea social network accounts". BBC News. 4 April 2013.
  73. ^ Tran, Mark (6 June 2008). "Travelling into Korea's demilitarised zone: Run DMZ". The Guardian. Retrieved 5 July 2009. Kijong-dong was built specially in the north area of DMZ. Designed to show the superiority of the communist model, it has no residents except soldiers.

Sources

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Further reading

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