Review by Choice Review
Baek (Oxford) was formerly a research fellow at Harvard's Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs and a North Korea expert at Google. Based mostly on the claims of a small number of North Korean defectors, she posits that over the last several decades a profound transformation has been taking place in North Korea, arguably the world's most isolated country, ruled over successively by three generations of tyrannical dynastic leadership drawn from a single family. That transformation, the author argues, has been fueled by foreign information able to penetrate North Korea and liberate North Koreans' minds. The author provides no persuasive evidence in support of such claims--or that the North Korean regime is crediting them by adopting a more conciliatory, genuinely reformist stance in its domestic practices or foreign and national-security policies. On the positive side, some credible illumination is provided in a brief appendix highlighting the underground means by which remittances are sent into North Korea. Well written and readable, the book will be of interest mostly to academic specialists and graduate students. Summing Up: Optional. Graduate students and faculty. --Alvin Magid, SUNY at Albany
Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Library Journal Review
Although North Korea is perhaps the most cloistered country on Earth, foreign media manages to infiltrate via radio broadcasts, balloon drops, and smuggling across the Chinese border. Through numerous interviews with North Korean defectors, Baek (fellow, Belfer Ctr. for Science and International Affairs, Harvard Univ.) examines how information from outside the country gets in and impacts the population. This book reveals a network of defectors, smugglers, and bribable border guards who traffic in DVDs, USB drives, and more. The content is typically not political, but rather popular movies and TV shows from South Korea and elsewhere. If caught, viewers face severe punishment. Despite the risks, natural curiosity and the desire for quality entertainment lead many to seek out foreign media. Consuming this information leads to gradual distrust of the government and compels some to leave the country. However, the author encourages readers to have realistic expectations. Viewing one foreign movie does not erase a lifetime of propaganda; therefore, those who work to get foreign information into North Korea should have long-term objectives. VERDICT An -engrossing work that is essential for all North Korea watchers.-Joshua Wallace, -Tarleton State Univ. Lib. Stephenville, TX © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
A crisp, dramatic examination of how technology and human ingenuity are undermining North Koreas secretive dictatorship.Baek, a fellow at the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at Harvard, synthesizes diverse research, including her own monitored visits and interviews within the hidden diaspora of successful defectors, to produce a comprehensible academic study attuned to the human toll of North Koreas oppressive regime. Despite the authorities determination to punish any rebellion, the author argues, over the past two decades there have been cracks in the states control over the dissemination of information among citizens. A horrific famine in the 1990s necessitated tolerance for informal markets, which later established smuggling routes for new technologies like USB drives and smartphones. This both fed and was amplified by the stream of defections to China and South Korea, which continued in spite of the cruelties the regime directed toward defectors families. Baek looks at the challenges faced by those who flee: When defectors cross into China, their minds are opened and their worlds change. Her interviews with such individuals buttress her thesis that the new wave of information sharing serves as inspiration, despite the states intrusive surveillance. She documents smuggling methodologies and the material that North Koreans desire, ranging from South Korean pop music and films to religious texts and Voice of Americastyle news broadcasts as well as Japanese DVD players and inexpensive radios, all available on the black market. Since North Korean society has a strict caste system, Baek argues that this amplifies the forbidden desires among less favored citizens to question the government and ultimately pursue a better life, despite the strong tendency to conform within an authoritarian state. Baeks writing is clear and patiently structured, which makes her interviewees accounts of brutal treatment and the inner revelations caused by smuggled media seem more urgently affecting. An original, authentic take on the fissures developing behind North Koreas totalitarian facade. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Review by Choice Review
Review by Library Journal Review
Review by Kirkus Book Review