The Cleanest Race
How North Koreans See Themselves and Why It Matters
How North Koreans See Themselves and Why It Matters
By B.R. Myers
By B.R. Myers
By B.R. Myers
By B.R. Myers
Category: Asian World History | Politics
Category: Asian World History | Politics
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Paperback $21.99
Dec 20, 2011 | ISBN 9781935554349
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Praise
“Electrifying… finely argued and brilliantly written.” —Christopher Hitchens, Slate
“[A] scary… close reading of domestic propaganda [that] goes a long way toward explaining the erratic behavior and seemingly bizarre thought processes of Dear Leader Kim Jong Il.” —The Wall Street Journal
“Myers’ book is worth buying and reading.” —The Quarterly Review
“The definitive book on the subject.” —The Atlantic
“There are few books that can give the world a peek into the Hermit Kingdom.The Cleanest Race provides a reason to care about how those in North Korea see themselves and the West. It is possibly the best addition to that small library of books on North Korean ideology.”
—Andrei Lankov, Far Eastern Economic Review
“Myers renders great service to the global foreign policy establishment with his lucid and well documented profile of the North Korean polity. If only it were made mandatory reading for all the stakeholder leaders, particularly the American establishment, who feel compelled to deal politically with North Korea. Maybe then, Myers’ wisdom might lead them to adopt the only possibly policy toward North Korea that will work: that of ‘benign neglect.'”
—Mike Gravel, US Senate 1969-1981
“In his new survey of North Korean propaganda, The Cleanest Race, B.R. Myers insists that the ongoing support of the North Korean public for the regime doesn’t reflect any great faith in communism. Instead, he argues, it is rooted in a kind of paranoid racial nationalism adapted from the Japanese fascism that flourished before World War II…. Myers feels that the racialism at the heart of the regime’s ideology will sustain it even as it fails to provide the prosperity it promises.”
—Laura Miller, Salon.com
“The text offers a clear picture of the peculiar worldview of this profoundly inward-facing country, its character and continuous subtle alterations, and its under-appreciated ramifications in world affairs.” —Reference & Research Book News
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