Kim Il-sung Essays

  • Rights and Responsibilities of North Korean Citizens

    1176 Words  | 3 Pages

    Republic of Korea electing Kim Il- Sung as the Prime Minster. This started the dictatorship in North Korea that still reigns on today. Kim Il-Sung was born in 1912. Earlier in his life he was named Kim Söng-Ju, but he changed it in the 1930’s when he became a Korean Freedom Fighter and changed his name to Il-Sung. (Biography.) Eventually Il-Sung went to the Soviet Union, there he joined the Communist Party. (Biography.) Later on he went to have a family and had a son Kim Jong- Il, who became dictator after

  • Essay On The North Korean Nuclear Program

    2147 Words  | 5 Pages

    Chronologically the North Korean Nuclear Program stems from the early 1950s; however, the program has its deeper origin back in 1989 during the conclusion of the Cold-War era. The year 1989 marked the deterioration of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) as the primary financial supporter of North Korea. The North Korean nuclear program can be simplified into approximately four different phases over time; moreover, the chronologies of these four main phases predominantly address the unresolved

  • Nothing To Envy Summary

    841 Words  | 2 Pages

    Nothing to Envy presents deep and thoughtful insights on the daily lives of people in North Korea. It is an informative book, providing the readers with moderate portions of history about Korea, as well as, connecting this historic information to the overall narrative of the book. It unveils the daily lives of the invisible population living in North Korea. Through reading this book, you will get a glimpse of what is it like to live under a totalitarian regime. It takes you in a journey to the minds

  • Kim Jong-Il: Social Discourse

    1067 Words  | 3 Pages

    discourse suggesting political and economic instability, especially as the current leader, Kim Jong-un, has heavy involvement in a nuclear arms program that could spell potentially deadly consequences worldwide. However, Kim Jung-il, the focus of this paper, played an active role in the decision-making processes contained with a heavily militarized bureaucratic apparatus. Likewise, the combined

  • North Korea's Public Distribution System

    1547 Words  | 4 Pages

    North Korea is a communist dictatorship which was established by Kim Sung Il. It had its own government-ran food distribution system, commonly known as the Public Distribution System. North Korea’s Public Distribution System was a failed attempt to help the government fully control its citizens. This system was designed to give the dictator, originally Kim Sung il, full power over North Korea. Kim Il Sung was the original founder of North Korea, and he founded it in 1948, shortly after the Korean

  • The Korean War: Causes and Aftermath

    1241 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Korean War explicitly portrayed the atrocious battle between both the North and South side which gave the United Nations its military role for the first time, thus expanding the war from a domestic to an international scale. Sometimes called “The Forgotten War”, the Korean War was mainly overshadowed in historical terms by the conflicts that occurred before and after it, World War II and the Vietnam War. The Korean War had raged for years without a true resolution and after years of battles,

  • North and South Korea: One Country, Two States

    1919 Words  | 4 Pages

    http://www.pbs.org/hiddenkorea/culture.htm Lee, G. (2003). The Political Philosophy of Juche. Stanford Journal of East Asian Affairs, 3:1. Retrieved from http://www.stanford.edu/group/sjeaa/journal3/korea1.pdf Park, Y. (2014). Policies and Ideologies of the Kim Jong-un Regime in North Korea: Theoretical Implications. Asian Studies Review, 38(1), 1. doi: 1080/10357823.2013.868864 Schaff, M. (2009). Prelude to Korean War. Prelude to Korean War, 1-2.

  • Essay On Internet Censorship

    1254 Words  | 3 Pages

    On 16th of December 1949, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights was signed. Although we want governments and regimes to abide with the articles not all do. Our government is formed to protect us and to provide every citizen, infrastructure in order to make the person able to live. However our governments also care for themselves as well. They want to stay in power thus they have to protect their reputation. This is where internet censorship steps in. Although censoring some sites is reasonable

  • Minders In North Korea

    787 Words  | 2 Pages

    as planned. They make sure everything is going the way they want it to. The minders are so serious about their job, that one of them threatened to kick the photographer out of the country for laying down to get a full shot of the giant statue of Kim Il-Sung. He explained that no one can lay down in front of the founder of North Korea, as, it is very disrespectful. Minders also act as a guide, translator and guard for the team.

  • The Causes of the Korean War

    779 Words  | 2 Pages

    of the first factors which caused the Korean War. The march called “the First Movement” was the first big demonstration against the Japanese. Syngman Rhee was the first president of South Korea and he was part of the nationalist movement. Kim Il Sung was the first president of North Korea and he was part of the guerilla warfare. South-Korea was the non-communist part and North Korea was the communist part. The Allies discussed Korea in the Cairo Declaration, at Yalta and at Teheran in

  • Cultural Differences Between North And South Korea

    1393 Words  | 3 Pages

    Korea’s Culture and Politics Seth Martin Rowan-Cabarrus Community College Abstract Korea was divided into North Korea and South Korea after the Korean War (1950-1953). Communist North Korea continues to be an underdeveloped country while South Korea continues to prosper in all areas such as technology, and agriculture. These two countries have vast differences with their political and government views. North Korea at one point was influenced by the Soviet Union but no longer. However

  • Persuasive Essay On North Korea

    898 Words  | 2 Pages

    “ a gargantuan bronze statue, a mausoleum, and a city square all dedicated to Kim Il-Sung can be found just in the vicinity of the center of the capital city, Pyongyang. According to Bok Ku-Lee, a defector who used to reside in Pyongyang, all people, from the lowliest of street vendors to the most prominent of state officials, are required to bow before Kim Il-Sung’s statue each time they pass by it.” (North Korea’s Oppression of Freedom of Speech 1) If not, they will

  • Nuclear Weapons are a Threat To World Peace

    2373 Words  | 5 Pages

    from the turmoil of the 1950s and 1960s to become an economic power and a democracy supporter. On the other hand, North Korea can be viewed as a retro country, based first on a Communist ideology, laid down by leader Kim Il Sung and inherited by his son, the current dictator Kim Jong Il, then evolving into a totalitarian state (Pacific Rim: East Asia at the Dawn of a New Century). Today North Korea holds the distinction of being one of the very few remaining countries to be truly cut off from the

  • Battle of Suwon

    1725 Words  | 4 Pages

    While the Korean War tends to be “forgotten” in military history, the conflict was rife with battles that changed history and defined future battle strategies. One of these battles, later referred to as the loss of Suwon Airfield, contained some of the first aerial “dogfights” and became an example for future pilots for aerial battle strategy. But the battle was not only fought in the air—upon closer study, it becomes obvious that the ground troops’ behavior is the main reason for the loss of the

  • North Korean Prison Camps: Kim Jong Ill

    927 Words  | 2 Pages

    of being starved, beaten, and worked to death. These harsh conditions are found within prison camps that were set up by previous leaders Kim Ill Sung, and Kim Jong Ill after the Korean War. These camps were originally created to capture political traitors along with scare North Korean people into being fully committed to the regime. Today, the current leader Kim Jong-Un has still continued the prison camps and has taken it to the extreme of capturing any North Korean

  • South Korean History,Culture and Population

    1904 Words  | 4 Pages

    According to the Institute of International Education’s 2013 open door findings, the second highest place of origin for foreign students in Minnesota is South Korea, with 9.8% of the total of international students in 2013 (Open Doors Data Minnesota, 2014). I was unaware of this information when I was partnered with two sweet girls from South Korea during our visit to the ELS center. With little knowledge of the South Korean culture myself; I realized many students at the University of St. Thomas

  • What Literature Teaches About Different Cultures

    1842 Words  | 4 Pages

    Our world is full of hundreds of cultures, scattered all over the place, but when we can’t travel to every country on earth, how can we find out about these cultures. We can learn a tremendous amount about a culture, just through studying their literature. First of all, we can learn a great amount about their basic culture; their everyday life. We can also learn what kind of society they live in now, and what kind they did live in hundreds of years ago. And finally we can learn about their history

  • Korean Culture: The Role Of Work In South Korea

    2012 Words  | 5 Pages

    Historically, in South Korean (from hereafter referred to as Korean) culture people need to work hard. According to Andrew Eungi Kim and Gil-Sung Park, work is “regarded as a social obligation, patriotic duty, and moral duty, replete with the notion that the more each individual works, the better off everyone is, including the company, and more importantly, the country” (41). This view towards work highlights that Koreans view work with the utmost importance. Only by working, will they be able to

  • Japan and Korea

    666 Words  | 2 Pages

    INTRODUCTION : a brief overview of the current situation regarding the security issue in the Pacific region Since the end of the Second World War, the shape of the relations between the nations in the Pacific region has stayed more or less the same way until the present. However, there has been one big changed that affected the situation in the Pacific region and it was the outbreak of the Korean war and the creation of a Communist North Korea. This brought a huge inevitable change in relations

  • Korean War in 1950-1953: Conflicting Ideologies

    1727 Words  | 4 Pages

    Military or Political? President Truman strategy was a “negotiated settlement” “This would end the war, unfortunately North Korea would remain independent.” His tactics were diplomatic, whenever there would be a dispute he would talk it out not causing any trouble or alarming other countries there is a collision of interests. Calling troops to act would be his last call, as he believed violence was unnecessary. As well as with the Korean War, he didn’t send in the troops to attack and recapture