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The Hidden People of North Korea: Everyday Life in the Hermit Kingdom
 
 
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The Hidden People of North Korea: Everyday Life in the Hermit Kingdom [Hardcover]

Ralph Hassig (Author), Kongdan Oh (Author)
3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Book Description

0742567184 978-0742567184 November 16, 2009
This unique book provides a comprehensive overview of all aspects of life in North Korea today. Drawing on decades of experience, noted experts Ralph Hassig and Kongdan Oh explore a world few outsiders can imagine. In vivid detail, the authors describe how the secretive and authoritarian government of Kim Jong-il shapes every aspect of its citizens' lives, how the command socialist economy has utterly failed, and how ordinary individuals struggle to survive through small-scale capitalism. Weighing the very limited individual rights allowed, the authors illustrate how the political class system and the legal system serve solely as tools of the regime.

The key to understanding how the North Korean people live, the authors argue, is to realize that their only allowed role is to support Kim Jong-il, whose father founded the country in the late 1940s. An intelligent and experienced dictator, Kim controls his people by keeping them isolated and banning most foreigners. This control has loosened slightly since the late 1990s, but North Koreans remain hungry and oppressed. Yet the outside world is slowly filtering in, and the book concludes by urging the United States to flood North Korea with information so that its people can make decisions based on truth rather than their dictator's ubiquitous propaganda.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

In this state survey, scholars Oh (whose parents fled North Korea) and Hassig (Oh's American-born husband), gather behind-the-curtain research to expose day-to-day life, and the powers that control it, in North Korea, a developed nation where meat is a luxury and the Internet doesn't exist for anyone but the dictator. Examining the history and present of the regime, the authors (2000's North Korea through the Looking Glass) provide a lucid guide to the mechanics by which Kim Jong Il's Soviet-style socialist totalitarianism has endured into this century. Much of their information has been available before (in their own work, David Hawk's comprehensive The Hidden Gulag, and elsewhere), but serious scholars of the region will find some new information, including the details of North Korea's transnational economy. The uninformed will find much that's fascinating and shocking: a nation of castes and concentration camps, replete with a politics of fear that rivals the worst Orwell could imagine. Though some topics are underreported-including the state ideology (religion by another name), Juche theory-Hassig and Oh provide a valuable catalog of oppression so deep that a hopeful conclusion-that Jong Il's regime is ultimately unsustainable-won't ameliorate the feeling of unease.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

And if you really wonder what life is like under Dear Leader, the team of Kongdan 'Katy' Oh and Ralph Hassig have produced the definitive work to date. (The Nelson Report )

An extraordinarily penetrating look behind the walls of North Korea's secretive society by two renowned specialists who identify the cracks developing in the ideological, economic, and political foundations of this totalitarian system. (Cohen, Roberta )

Kongdan Oh and Ralph Hassig—analysts of unique experience and depth—look behind North Korea's bluster, blasts, and missiles to the eroding country they hide. The authors shine a light on the country's people—from dictator Kim Jong-il and his privileged inner circle to the millions of Koreans who struggle through desperate lives of hunger, want, and fear. That this system has changed in recent years makes the book especially timely and invaluable for making sense of an inflammatory and unpredictable rogue state. (James A. Kelly )

Ralph Hassig and Kongdan Oh have opened a peephole through the locked door that is North Korea. They draw on their deep knowledge of the country and extensive interviewing of refugees to provide a rich and textured picture of the life of a people who are victims of their leaders’ megalomania. New insights and information spring from every page. (Bush, Richard C. )

As often as North Korea is in the news, we have little reliable information about what life is actually like in this 'hermit kingdom,' and that’s no accident. Husband-and-wife Korea experts Hassig and Oh begin this illuminating national portrait with a quote from its leader, Kim Jong-il: 'We must envelop our environment in a dense fog to prevent our enemies from learning anything about us.' . . . Hassig and Oh provide chilling information and haunting photographs that starkly delineate the crisis state of North Korea’s economy, agriculture, and health care; the abundance of political prisons; and the tyranny of perpetual surveillance. (Booklist )

A must-read for serious students of North Korea. The wealth of information peels back layers of mystique to provide a genuinely understandable glimpse of the inner workings of Kim Jong-il's North Korea. The chapter on the Kim family is absolutely essential to understanding why North Korea is the unique nation that it is. It should be required reading for American policymakers. (Ambassador Jack Pritchard )

Examining the history and present of the regime, the authors provide a lucid guide to the mechanics by which Kim Jong Il’s Soviet-style socialist totalitarianism has endured into this century. . . . [Readers] will find much that’s fascinating and shocking: a nation of castes and concentration camps, replete with a politics of fear that rivals the worst Orwell could imagine. . . . Hassig and Oh provide a valuable catalog of oppression. (Publishers Weekly )

It's particularly welcome then that Ralph Hassig and Kongdan Oh . . . have tried to penetrate [the North Korean government’s] fog to examine the daily lives of 23 million souls. . . . [The authors] provide a fascinating account of the political forces that have shaped the barriers between the Hermit Kingdom and the rest of the world. . . . It's in these tales of everyday life that the book makes its greatest contribution. . . . The North Korean people, long denied any voice in their society, will decide the fate of the nation, and as this book convincingly shows in preceding pages, they have finally turned their back on the regime. (Wall Street Journal )

Revealing the haunting details of daily life in an authoritarian state, the authors boldly declare that the current regime is unraveling despite its feverish attempts to hold on to power; even sprouts of capitalism are appearing in North Korean society. . . . Western readers will gain a rare view of the hidden world of North Korean citizens. Recommended for those interested in international affairs or inquisitive about this last remnant of the Communist world. (Library Journal )

Mr. Hassig and Ms. Oh’s portrait of Mr. Kim’s hyper-sybaritic lifestyle is detailed and devastating. (The New York Times )

Hassig and Oh . . . offer a detailed picture of the lives of Kim Jong Il and the members of his entourage and a study of why and how defectors break for the outside. [They] show that the regime is under stress, but they also reveal the mechanisms by which, for the time being, it is holding tight. (Foreign Affairs )

In The Hidden People of North Korea: Everyday Life in the Hermit Kingdom, longtime Korea watchers Ralph Hassig and Kongdan Oh cover topics from the ruling Kims down to the struggles of ordinary North Koreans. In their view, buttressed by interviews with some 200 defectors, the state is fraying. . . . Experts have been predicting the endgame for the Kim regime for decades. These books—both of them important additions to the North Korea canon—suggest that the moment of change is approaching. (Time.Com )

As Kongdan Oh and Ralph Hassig note in their informative book, the apparatchiks are soon holding lectures warning that North Korea could go the way of the Warsaw Pact if Party functionaries can't stem the corrosive effects of entertainment from the outside world. (New York Review Of Books )

The Hidden People is important as the first comprehensive guide to a new, post-famine North Korean society made available to an English-speaking audience....I am often asked what I consider to be the best introduction for readers curious about the basics of North Korean life. From now on, The Hidden People will be my recommendation. (Pacific Affairs )

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 296 pages
  • Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers (November 16, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0742567184
  • ISBN-13: 978-0742567184
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.3 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #489,341 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
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16 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Authors Hassig and Oh hit it out of the park again: a must read on North Korea, November 9, 2009
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Merrily Baird (atlanta, ga USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Hidden People of North Korea: Everyday Life in the Hermit Kingdom (Hardcover)
The ever-growing community of government officials, scholars, and ordinary citizens concerned about North Korea has cause to celebrate the issuance of "The Hidden People of North Korea" by Ralph Hassig and Kongdan Oh. A decade ago, in publishing "North Korea through the Looking Glass," this husband and wife team established themselves as leading observers of North Korea. "The Hidden People" reaffirms that status by showcasing their superb ability to synthesize a vast amount of information without policy bias. At the same time, the strengths of Hassig and Oh in sorting out signs of change and training a powerful light on the fault lines between illusion and reality provide the raw material for others to judge whether North Korea can long survive as we currently know it.

"The Hidden People" is divided into nine chapters. Chapters 2 through 8 focus on Kim Chong-il, his family, and his leadership style; the economic system as it operates in theory and is lived by people on an every day basis; the government's crumbling control of the information environment; human rights issues; and the growing number of defections. Neither the final chapter, "The End Comes Slowly," nor any other offers a significant focus on the strategic questions with which policymakers most often grapple. In this regard, there is very limited attention paid to the country's dependence on weapons of mass destruction, its willingness to proliferate WMD technology, and its inclination (or lack thereof) to abide by disarmament agreements. This matters little, however, because numerous other authors have addressed these issues.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Misleading, January 11, 2012
This review is from: The Hidden People of North Korea: Everyday Life in the Hermit Kingdom (Hardcover)
This is supposed to be a book about life in North Korea. Instead it is a hodge-podge of statistics, the living conditions of the leadership, how bodyguards are selected and about three hundred pages of other ramblings. I was very disappointed in this book as I hoped for a look into the actual living condition's and lifestyle of average North Koreans. If I had wanted a statistical and economic briefing of the country, I would have called the state department.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Understanding a Closed Society, February 15, 2010
This review is from: The Hidden People of North Korea: Everyday Life in the Hermit Kingdom (Hardcover)
This is the most authoritative and complete report yet available outside the hermit kingdom on life in North Korea. I have known "Katy" Oh for some years as a top American analyst of Korean issues, and this husband and wife product is a tour de force indeed considering how difficult the subject. With this deeper understanding at hand, perhaps we will hear fewer simplistic assumptions about the North in the future. The Hassigs persuasively suggest that the foreign aid we and South Korea have provided actually served to help prolong the regime. As one of those who predicted Kim Chong-il's reign would be short after the death of the Great Leader, it is clear to me now why so many of us were wrong, and why this anachronistic closed totalitarianism may well even survive his own death. Highly readable, thorough, and well written.
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