BOOK
REVIEW
Lifting the cloak on North Korean secrecy
The Cleanest Race, How North Koreans See Themselves by B R
Myers
April, 10, 2010, Asia Times
Reviewed by Michael Rank
North Korea, one of the poorest countries in Asia, is also the best
defended with an army of over one million to protect a population of just 23
million. But it does not only depend on its army to fend off the outside world:
it also relies on an extraordinary degree of secrecy to baffle its adversaries
and throw them off-guard.
Most Western Pyongyang-watchers are forced to
rely on the absurdly obfuscatory Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) and on
reports of varying reliability in the English-language South Korean media to
discern what is going on, which means that unless they know Korean, which they
almost certainly don't, they have almost no first-hand information of what the
North
Korean government is really up to.
B R Myers is a rare
exception among Western North Korea experts: he has a first-rate grasp of Korean
and has heroically spent countless hours reading North Korean newspapers, novels
and political tracts in the
North Korea Resource Center in the Reunification Ministry in
Seoul. This has led him to come to some striking conclusions about the nature of
the North Korean regime in a highly original book that anyone
interested in what is going on above the 38th parallel simply has to read.
He makes a surprising but convincing case for claiming that the Kims,
father and
son, play the role of mother figures in North Korean ideology,
forever clutching children and even soldiers to their ample bosoms, while the
North Korean people are portrayed as a uniquely innocent child-race fondly
indulged by the "Parent Leader".
Myers sets out his main conclusions in
a gripping preface in which he condemns North Korea-watchers of all persuasions
and backgrounds for having
... tended toward interpretations of the country in which ideology plays next to no role. Conservatives generally explain the dictatorship's behavior in terms of a cynical struggle to maintain power and privilege, while liberals prefer to regard the DPRK [Democratic People's Republic of Korea] as a "rational actor", a country behaving much as any tiny country would in the face of a hostile superpower. Such interest as either camp can bring to bear on so-called soft issues exhausts itself in futile attempts to make sense of Juche Thought, a sham doctrine with no bearing on Pyongyang's policy-making.
Myers asks why "there is more talk of
ideological matters in any issue of Arab Studies Journal than in a dozen issues
of North Korean Review? The obvious if undiplomatic answer is that most
Pyongyang watchers do not understand Korean well enough to read the relevant
official texts."
While he is highly dismissive of the North Korean
ideology of juche (self-reliance), which he dismisses as a smokescreen to
baffle foreigners - highly successfully, one might add - Myers insists that the
personality cult in which the regime envelopes itself should be taken seriously.
"The only institution in the country that did not miss a beat during the famine
of the mid-1990s was the propaganda apparatus," he notes.
Myers is scathing about those who regard the regime as essentially
Stalinist or Confucian, and summarizes its worldview as follows: "The Korean
people are too pure blooded, and therefore too virtuous, to survive in this evil
world without a great parental leader." This would place Pyongyang on the
extreme right of the political spectrum rather than the far left, and Myers
notes that "the similarity to the worldview of fascist Japan is striking".
Mount Fuji was transmogrified into Mount Paektu while the cult of Kim
Il-sung bears striking similarities to the Japanese emperor cult. "Like Kim,"
Myers writes, "Hirohito appeared as the hermaphroditic parent of a child race
whose virtues he embodied; was associated with white clothing, white horses, the
snow-capped peak of the race's sacred mountain, and other symbols of racial
purity ..." He explains this as partly the result of collaboration among the
Korean elite during the Japanese occupation, and quotes a South Korean historian
as saying these collaborators regarded themselves as "pro-Japanese [Korean]
nationalists".
Despite the deep influence of Japanese ideology on North
Korean thinking, the Japanese are depicted as enemies with whom there can be no
reconciliation, and much the same goes for Americans. The author notes that
North Korean dictionaries and schoolbooks portray Americans in sub-human terms,
as having "muzzles", "snouts" and "paws", and while the Korean War of the early
1950s occupies a central place in anti-American propaganda, there is little
stress on the US Air Force's extensive bombing campaign as this "is hard to
reconcile with the myth of a protective Leader" and the regime focuses instead
on village massacres and other more isolated outrages.
Myers argues that
fanatical anti-Americanism is what helps to keep the regime in power, and that
far from seeking a positive relationship with the US, "It negotiates with
Washington not to defuse tension but to manage it, to keep it from tipping into
all-out war or an equally perilous all-out peace".
Myers must be the
only non-Korean on Earth who has taken a serious look at North Korean fiction
(he wrote a previous book on the subject), and this affords him some fascinating
insights. He highlights the sharp contrast with Soviet Stalinist fiction, in
which the Communist Party posed as an educating father, while
... the DPRK's propaganda is notably averse to scenes of intellectual discipline. Because Koreans are born pure and selfless, they can and should heed their instincts. Often they are shown breaking out of intellectual constraints in a mad spree of violence against the foreign or land-owning enemy. Cadres are expected to nurture, not teach, and bookworms are negative characters. In short: where Stalinism put the intellect over the instincts, North Korean culture does the opposite.
This sharply
written, beautifully designed book is richly illustrated with North Korean propaganda
posters and photographs. I did not agree with everything the
author says - I think he underestimates the influence of Confucianism in North
Korea and also underplays the cruelty of the Japanese occupation of Korea - but
this is a remarkably perceptive study that everyone with an interest in North
Korea, and in the practice
and theory of authoritarian regimes generally, should read.
The Cleanest Race, How North Koreans See Themselves - And Why It
Matters by B R Myers. Melville House, Brooklyn, NY, 2009. ISBN-10:
1933633913. Price US$24.95, 208 pages.
Michael Rank is a
former Reuters correspondent in China, now working in London.
(Copyright 2010
Asia Times online (Holdings) Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact us about
sales, syndication and republishing.)
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