Han Seol-hyang blushes as she recounts her memories of teenage dating in Pyongyang.
“Everything was in secret. It wasn’t all out in the open like in South Korea,” says the 30-year-old daughter of a North Korean government official. “It wasn’t that we were scared of being punished; that was just the culture.”
South Korea’s brash dating scene is one of a bewildering range of cultural differences confronting more than 25,000 North Koreans who have made their way south over the past 20 years, with many struggling to integrate socially and economically.
您已閱讀15%(552字),剩余85%(3092字)包含更多重要信息,訂閱以繼續(xù)探索完整內(nèi)容,并享受更多專屬服務(wù)。