- ID:22688
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You’d be forgiven for not immediately thinking of North Koreans as people enjoying unlimited leisure time. A vicious famine decimated up to a fifth of the population in the Nineties and they live in an dictatorship moulded around the figure of Kim Jung Il.
Yet on a recent, state-managed and highly-restricted tour to the secretive Stalinist state, a Demotix photographer was exposed to repeated set-pieces of people enjoying their free time with a number of different activities: karaoke singing on the beach, impromptu serenades by the river in the capital city Pyongyang, and enjoying a night out at the May Day Stadium to view the world’s largest propaganda spectacle, the Arirang Games.
As the global recession brings about the kind of conditions Marx had envisaged when agitating for his Communist Revolution, here are images proving that living in the world’s last Stalinist stronghold is more fun than it appears... -Young martial arts students participate in a synchronized display in a grand hall of the Children’s Palace, a centre for performing excellence in Pyongyang.
Details
- id:22688
- date:19 February 2009
- dimensions:18.72 x 12.48 in. (5616 x 3744 px)
- dpi:300dpi
- file size in memory:60.16 MB
Story summary
Details
- id:22688
- date:19 February 2009
- dimensions:18.72 x 12.48 in. (5616 x 3744 px)
- dpi:300dpi
- file size in memory:60.16 MB
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