What Is Happening In North Korea? -- News Updates January 4, 2009
North Koreans visit a statue of the former leader Kim Il-Sung in Pyongyang on New Year's Day. Photograph: EPA
Inside The Hermit Kingdom -- Salon.com
A rare and fascinating glimpse of the lives of ordinary North Koreans.
The image that opens the first chapter of Barbara Demick's "Nothing to Envy: Ordinary Lives in North Korea"is a satellite photograph of North and South Korea by night. The southern nation is spangled with electric lights, including the vast, solid blotch of brightness that is Seoul, while the north is entirely dark except for the tiny dot of the capital, Pyongyang. The Western view of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea is mostly made up of freakish pictures like this one, official footage of goose-stepping soldiers and automaton-like crowds performing tributes to "Dear Leader" Kim Jong-Il, eerie samizdat video of crisply uniformed police directing nonexistent traffic on empty streets, the bizarre spectacle of the vacant Ryugyong Hotel (aka the "Hotel of Doom") towering over Pyongyang, and the ubiquitous socialist-realist kitsch seemingly beamed in from the middle of the previous century.