Long-Term Projects, 3rd prize
North Korea: Life in the Cult of Kim
David Guttenfelder
The New York Times
The New York Times
20 May, 2015
Nurses speak on telephones at a video conference booth inside the Pyongyang Maternity Hospital. Hospital officials say that new mothers and infants are expected to stay isolated from the public, and the possible germs they carry, for at least a week after their baby is born. These conference booths allow visitors to see the newborns and speak to the mothers from a seat in the lobby.
North Korea emerged in the upheaval following the end of World War II and the Korean War, and for six decades has been one of the most isolated and secretive nations on earth. Its history is dominated by the founding president, Kim Il-sung, known as the Great Leader. He shaped political affairs for almost half a century, establishing a totalitarian state which shut itself off from the outside world. A leadership cult has grown around the Kim dynasty, passing from Kim Il-sung to his son Kim Jong-il (the Dear Leader) and grandson, the current supreme leader Kim Jong-un.
The country is run along rigidly state-controlled lines. Local media are strictly regulated, and the foreign press largely excluded. The photographer was granted rare access, visiting North Korea on some 40 occasions between 2008 and 2015. He photographed not only large state-orchestrated events, but also everyday rural life.
David Guttenfelder
David Guttenfelder is a photojournalist and National Geographic Explorer focusing on geopolitical conflict, conservation, and culture. Guttenfelder has spent more than 25 year...
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