Censorship
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The '''Democratic People's Republic of Korea''' ('''North Korea''') is an Asian country.
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The '''Democratic People's Republic of Korea''' ('''North Korea''') is an Asian country that is officially atheistic. It is probably the single most isolated country in the world.
   
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==General==
 
North Korea is the most repressed nation in the world, and North Korean residents are obliged to listen to state propaganda.
 
North Korea is the most repressed nation in the world, and North Korean residents are obliged to listen to state propaganda.
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North Korea bans nearly anything foreign — and enforces this through serious punishments. This can happen even to those caught listening to South Korean music (not that it stops South Korea from broadcasting music over the border, through both radio and giant loudspeakers).
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==Internet censorship==
 
==Internet censorship==
The North Korean government has banned any website, such as YouTube, Facebook and more, causing North Koreans to not have any access to the open internet.
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The North Korean government has banned any website, such as YouTube, Facebook and more, causing North Koreans to not have any access to the open internet, accessing only the Kwangmyong, an intranet network separate from the World Wide Web (and, according to the North Korean government, free from outside influence).
   
 
==Books censorship==
 
==Books censorship==
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While ''The Diary of a Young Girl'' is not banned, and is sometimes required reading in schools, the views of the education system and the public differ - The North Korean education system makes the point that while Anne Frank had a beautiful dream, her foolishness to be defeated by the Nazis is what killed her, and they use this point to demonize the [[United States|United States of America]] further. The public, on the other hand, relate to the struggles of Frank herself.
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In the 1990s, the government allowed the novel ''Gone with the Wind'', to show the people an example of what Western art was like. The idea is that it could show The American Civil War and the ugly side (according the government) of bourgeois capitalism. It became wildly popular, but for the wrong reasons — North Koreans related strongly to the struggle for survival in a poor, war-torn country.
   
 
==Video Games censorship==
 
==Video Games censorship==
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Access to video games made in the West is generally nonexistent due to the state-run economy.
   
 
==Movies censorship==
 
==Movies censorship==
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''Bend It Like Beckham'' is the only Western movie ever shown on North Korean TV, albeit in heavily abridged form.
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Ironically, in 2016, the 2006 North Korean film ''The Schoolgirl's Diary'' was banned in its homeland because the government deemed it "subversive".
   
 
==TV censorship==
 
==TV censorship==
 
Only four television stations exist, all of which are state-run. No private television services are allowed.
 
Only four television stations exist, all of which are state-run. No private television services are allowed.
   
  +
Foreign tourists can get foreign TV channels like BBC World in their hotel rooms. This is easy to pull off because the only hotel open to foreigners in Pyongyang is on an island in the Taedong River, and no one can leave without a guide or talk to any North Korean civilians, so no North Koreans can learn about TV from tourists.
{{Stub}}
 
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[[Category:Stub]]
 
 
[[Category:North Korea censorship]]
 
[[Category:North Korea censorship]]
 
[[Category:Needs image]]
 
[[Category:Needs image]]

Revision as of 15:39, 22 October 2021

The Democratic People's Republic of Korea (North Korea) is an Asian country that is officially atheistic. It is probably the single most isolated country in the world.

General

North Korea is the most repressed nation in the world, and North Korean residents are obliged to listen to state propaganda. North Korea bans nearly anything foreign — and enforces this through serious punishments. This can happen even to those caught listening to South Korean music (not that it stops South Korea from broadcasting music over the border, through both radio and giant loudspeakers).

Internet censorship

The North Korean government has banned any website, such as YouTube, Facebook and more, causing North Koreans to not have any access to the open internet, accessing only the Kwangmyong, an intranet network separate from the World Wide Web (and, according to the North Korean government, free from outside influence).

Books censorship

While The Diary of a Young Girl is not banned, and is sometimes required reading in schools, the views of the education system and the public differ - The North Korean education system makes the point that while Anne Frank had a beautiful dream, her foolishness to be defeated by the Nazis is what killed her, and they use this point to demonize the United States of America further. The public, on the other hand, relate to the struggles of Frank herself.

In the 1990s, the government allowed the novel Gone with the Wind, to show the people an example of what Western art was like. The idea is that it could show The American Civil War and the ugly side (according the government) of bourgeois capitalism. It became wildly popular, but for the wrong reasons — North Koreans related strongly to the struggle for survival in a poor, war-torn country.

Video Games censorship

Access to video games made in the West is generally nonexistent due to the state-run economy.

Movies censorship

Bend It Like Beckham is the only Western movie ever shown on North Korean TV, albeit in heavily abridged form.

Ironically, in 2016, the 2006 North Korean film The Schoolgirl's Diary was banned in its homeland because the government deemed it "subversive".

TV censorship

Only four television stations exist, all of which are state-run. No private television services are allowed.

Foreign tourists can get foreign TV channels like BBC World in their hotel rooms. This is easy to pull off because the only hotel open to foreigners in Pyongyang is on an island in the Taedong River, and no one can leave without a guide or talk to any North Korean civilians, so no North Koreans can learn about TV from tourists.