• klep@lemmy.ml
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      2 days ago

      Awesome, thank you!

      I’m hoping, honestly, for some revolutionary stuff I would love to hear from a Korean revolutionary, or Korean revolutionary thought.

      Do you know why it is that this stuff is essentially unavailable? Has NK forbade literature from leaving the country, or is this an issue in the US/Western countries?

      • ghost_of_faso3@lemmygrad.ml
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        2 days ago

        Has NK forbade literature from leaving the country, or is this an issue in the US/Western countries?

        The issue the author ran into isnt that NK doesnt allow lit/art to leave the country; in fact they really want that to happen! Art is one of North Korea’s biggest exports, they are the biggest supplier of statues in the world and have some stunning works on display in Africa.

        Its that everytime a collector like this tries to showcase work, make profit off of reselling NK artists art and such, it gets censored or closed down by western govermnets due to ‘human rights concerns’

        • klep@lemmy.ml
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          2 days ago

          That’s really interesting. I know next to nothing about the DPRK, much less their art/literature/thought/etc.

          Thanks for the insight, now I have a new rabbit hole to go down.

            • klep@lemmy.ml
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              2 days ago

              Holy shit. That’s fucking impressive

              Thanks for sharing. Today has been a bit eye opening for me. I’ve read a lot of theory, and am an anarcho-syndicalist, but I know next to nothing about the Korean Revolution. I have a lot of reading to do.

              Thanks, comrade.

      • afellowkid@lemmygrad.ml
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        2 days ago

        You might be interested in this: https://archive.org/details/my-life-and-faith-eng/

        Memoirs of a Korean who grew up under Japanese occupation, got radicalized as a young teen and became a revolutionary, lived in the newly formed DPRK, then became a war correspondent, later got captured and spent 40 years being tortured in south Korean prison, and was eventually released and he returned to DPRK. It’s his memoir but it also serves as an overview of recent Korean history starting from the Japanese occupation period.