While the country is not officially understood to be a monarchy North Korea does employ a re-modern, traditional form of authority within its government, while simultaneously using the highly modern concept of a “cult of personality,” in which a government uses wide-spread propaganda to idealize a ruler. The application of these two political methods has created a powerful hybrid form of governance that relies on the strengths of one another to form a new, evolved form of leadership. In North Korea, the communist government claims to place power among its workers, however, true power lies with Supreme Leader Kim Jong-un, who obtained his power through his ancestry, a crucial element in Weber’s idea of traditional authority. The cult of personality that has been developed regarding Kim Il-sung, Kim Jong-il, and Kim Jong-un adopts a fusion of both pre-modern and modern politics as it uses mass media and public education to establish a god-like status to its leaders, similarly to pre-modern concepts like the Mandate of Heaven. By enforcing the idea that the nation’s leaders are divine beings through propaganda, North Koreans are indoctrinated into an incredibly nationalistic ideology that theoretically prohibits them from opposing the government.…