cover image The Cleanest Race: How North Koreans See Themselves--And Why It Matters

The Cleanest Race: How North Koreans See Themselves--And Why It Matters

B. R. Myers. Melville House Publishing, $24.95 (200pp) ISBN 978-1-933633-91-6

A particularly nasty strain of racist propaganda has enabled North Korea's dictatorship to maintain power, according to this fascinating cultural survey. An American-born, South Korea-based instructor of North Korean literature, Myers (A Reader's Manifesto) combines his cultural and linguistic fluency with sharp analysis to throw light on one of the world's most closed-off cultures. Examining North Korean books, news broadcasts, and films, Myers finds that the country's supremacist propaganda can be traced to imperial Japan, which sought to convince Koreans that they were part of the ""world's purest race."" Myers acidly discredits Western interpretations of North Korea as ""hard-line communist"" or ""Confucian,"" noting the prevalence of maternal rather than paternal imagery and the societal scorn for the former Soviet bloc. Esoteric cultural markers-e.g., the heavy use of flashbacks in film and literature-are mined for compelling clues to the North Korean sensibility. Myers' greatest feat is his explanation of how the regime has maintained power despite its failures in almost every area of governance-how it has convinced average North Korean citizens that shipments of U.S. food aid, for example, are actually reparations for past ""Yankee"" crimes. A sharp and smart introduction to one of the world's most secretive societies.