Others in Japanese agriculture : Koreans, evacuees and migrants 1920-1950
著者
書誌事項
Others in Japanese agriculture : Koreans, evacuees and migrants 1920-1950
(Japanese society series)
Kyoto University Press , Trans Pacific Press, 2018
- : hardback
- : Kyoto University Press
- タイトル別名
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Tasha tachi no nōgyō-shi : Zainichi Chōsenjin, sokaisha, kaitaku nōmin, kaigai ijū
「他者」たちの農業史 : 在日朝鮮人・疎開者・開拓農民・海外移住
「他者」たちの農業史 : 在日朝鮮人・疎開者・開拓農民・海外移民
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注記
First published in Japanese: Kyoto University Press, 2014
Includes bibliographical references (p. 326-350) and indexes
内容説明・目次
- 巻冊次
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: Kyoto University Press ISBN 9784814001583
目次
- 1 The ethnic problem in Japan’s farming villages
- 2 Evacuation,return to farming and postwar settlement
- 3 Farmers’ lived experience of borders from Manchuria to postwar settlement
- 4 Japanese expatriate ‘others’:Postwar land reform and migration
- 5 Putting down roots:Postwar administration of overseas agricultural emigration and farmers Conclusion
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内容説明・目次
- 巻冊次
-
: hardback ISBN 9781925608977
内容説明
Japan's national identity associates the 'Japanese people' with the Japanese land, making the farmer the backbone of the nation.
Others in Japanese Agriculture challenges this mythology, revealing the changing faces of Japanese farmers during the colonial and post-war eras. First, it traces the tangled trail of Koreans brought into farming villages as a result of war mobilization and capitalist development. Second, it discusses the plight of those who evacuated from cities as they attempted to eke out a living on marginal land. Third, it points out that settlers repatriated from the colonies were met with hostility from villagers and indifference from authorities. Finally, it explores how those who were encouraged to emigrate for 'the good of the nation' in post-war Japan, found themselves victims of agrarian reforms, which severed their ties.
In sum, despite being lauded as the 'backbone of the nation' Japanese farmers have been repeatedly marginalized and othered.
目次
Figures
Tables
Photos
List of Contributors
Introduction
Noriko Sudo
1 Film Control in the Japan Film Law (Eiga-ho)
Atsuko KATO
2 "Me-istic Nationalism" in Films Promoted by the Japan Self-Defense Forces: Focus on Midnight Eagle as an Example
Noriko SUDO
3 Collaboration between U.S. Film Industry and U.S. Government for Film Distribution in the Republic of China
Takeshi TANIKAWA
4 WWII Film Production in Chongqing: The Japanese Spy
Yanli HAN
5 Factors in the Establishment of the Animation Industry in Postwar Japan
Tomoya KIMURA
6 Virtuous and Depraved: Portrayals of Women in North Korean Cinema
Benjamin JOINAU
7 Dual Language, Dubbed Cinema: An Enlightened Colonial Subject in Homeless Angels
Youngjae YI
8 Double-edged National Imagery: From The Daughter of the Samurai to My Japan
Takeshi TANIKAWA
9 The Mysterious Popularity of Japanese Films in Taiwan in the 1950s and '60s
Mamie MISAWA
Index
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