North Korea through the Looking Glass by Kong Dan Oh, Ralph C. Hassig, Kongdan Oh
How much do you really know about North Korea? With the global situation as it is, Americans and others need to understand more about the problems we are facing. North Korea through the Looking Glass by Kong Dan Oh, Ralph C. Hassig, Kongdan Oh may be a source of good information for you.
"Oh and Hassig give their readers genuine insight into one of the most bizarre and mysterious societies on earth, at the precise moment when the North Korean tragicomedy appears to be moving toward a denouement. The value and timing of this book could not be greater." - Francis Fukuyama, Hirst Professor of Public Policy, George Mason University
"No one can presume to predict the near term future of North Korea-implosion, explosion, gradual assimilation into the Asian community of nations, peaceful reunification with the South, or continuing down the current path of a hermit nation-isolated and struggling to survive. We can predict with certainty that insights into what drives this nation of 23 million people, a focus of U.S. defense planning for 50 years, will continue to be important to U.S. national interests for years to come. Kongdan (Katy) Oh and Ralph Hassig have made a rich contribution to meeting the need for these insights with a view through the looking glass into the mystery that is North Korea. This is an important book, readable and profound. It is worthy of the careful study and attention of those who want to better understand the global environment that shapes and permeates our own future." - General Larry D. Welch, President, Institute for Defense Analyses
"Neither with rancor nor sentimentality Oh and Hassig unpeel the layers of misinformation, vilification, and speculation about North Korea to provide a textured view of this enigmatic Northeast Asian State. This fine book outlines the seemingly impenetrable logic of the North Korean ideology of Juche showing how it dominates state economic and foreign policy. It is also one of the best analyses of the leadership cults of the late Kim Il Sung and the current leader Kim Jong Il. The analysis presented here is not idle punditry; it is based on painstaking research, thorough familiarity with Korean language sources, and extensive interviews of a multinational group of policymakers familiar with North Korea, as well as defectors. This book will become a standard read for those interested in why North Korea has survived the fall of the global socialist system to continue to confound the stability and evolution of Northeast Asia's economic and diplomatic relations. It will also be required reading for American strategic planners who have isolated North Korea as a major security threat to the U.S. Oh and Hassig capture the unique dynamics behind the survival and continuance of this unique system whose future resides at the very heart of the Northeast Asian state system and its future." - Michael E. Robinson, Indiana University
About the Author
Kongdan Oh, a Korean American, is a research staff member at the Institute for Defense Analyses, a nonresident senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, and editor of the Asia Society's Korea Briefing, 1997-1999 (M. E. Sharpe and the Asia Society, 2000).
Ralph C. Hassig, a social psychologist, is a Washington-based consultant on Korean affairs and an adjunct associate professor of psychology at the University of Maryland University College.
index
And the Wind Blew Cold by Richard M. Bassett, Lewis H. Carlson |
The Aquariums of Pyongyang by Kang Chol-Hwan, Pierre Rigoulot, Yair Reiner |
Avoiding the Apocalypse by Marcus Noland, C. Fred Bergsten |
Disarming Strangers by Leon V. Sigal |
East of Chosin by Roy Edgar Appleman |
Facts Tell by Democratic Peoples Republic of Korea |
From Stalin to Kim Il Sung by Andrei Lankov, A. N. LAN'Kov |
The Great North Korean Famine by Andrew S. Natsios |
In Enemy Hands by Larry Zellers |
Korean Atrocity! by Philip D. Chinnery |
Korean Endgame by Selig S. Harrison |
Korea's Future and the Great Powers by Nicholas Eberstadt, Richard J. Ellings |
Korea's Place in the Sun by Bruce Cumings |
Negotiating on the Edge by Scott Snyder |
The North and South Korean Political Systems by Song Chol Yang, Sung Chul Yang, Song-Ch'ol Yang |
The North Korean Revolution, 1945-1950 by Charles K. Armstrong |
North Korea and the Bomb by Michael J. Mazarr |
North Korea by Han S. Park - The Politics of Unconventional Wisdom |
North Korea through the Looking Glass by Kong Dan Oh, Ralph C. Hassig, Kongdan Oh |
North Korea Under Communism by Erik Cornell |
North and South Korea by William Dudley |
One Anthropologist, Two Worlds by Choong Soon Kim |
Remembered Prisoners of a Forgotten War by Lewis H. Carlson |
The Two Koreas by Don Oberdorfer |
White Tigers by Ben S. Malcom, Ron Martz