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El. knyga: Women in Asia under the Japanese Empire

Edited by (Keio University, Japan), Edited by (College of Foreign Languages and Cultures, Xiamen University, China.)

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Contributors to this book provide an Asian women’s history from the perspective of gender analysis, assessing Japanese imperial policy and propaganda in its colonies and occupied territories and particularly its impact on women.

Tackling topics including media, travel, migration, literature, and the perceptions of the empire by the colonized, the authors present an eclectic history, unified by the perspective of gender studies and the spatial and political lens of the Japanese Empire. They look at the lives of women in,Taiwan, Korea, Manchuria, Mainland China, Micronesia, and Okinawa, among others. These women were wives, mothers, writers, migrants, intellectuals and activists, and thus had a very broad range of views and experiences of Imperial Japan. Where women have tended in the past to be studied as objects of the imperial system, the contributors to this book study them as the subject of history, while also providing an outside-in perspective on the Japanese Empire by other Asians.

A vital new perspective for scholars of twentieth-century history of East Asian countries and regions.



Contributors to this book provide an Asian women’s history from the perspective of gender analysis, assessing Japanese imperial policy and propaganda in its colonies and occupied territories and particularly its impact on women.

Introduction Part
1. The Ideal of Women Delivered by the Empire
1. The
Japanese Womens Journals in Colonial Taiwan: The Patriotic Taiwans Women
and Taiwanese Womens World
2. Expressing independence in the midst of
collaboration: Female roles in the womens magazine Qi Lin of Manchukuo
3.
"Wise Wives and Good Mothers": Disobedience in Disguise under the
Collaborationist Regime in Guangzhou (19401945) Part
2. Women Traveling in
and Writing on Asia
4. The West, Asia, and Women in Rha Hye-seoks Travels
5.
A Japanese womens exploration of semi-colonized China: The case of Hayashi
Fumiko 's Traveling writing around 1930
6. Womens "language/translation"
community in Japan/Korea: Hayashi Fumiko as Japanese imperial novelist Part
3. Seeking "Imperial Women" in Colonial Asia
7. Japanese Women in Colonial
Taiwan in the 1930s: Their Identity Formation Under the Influence of Japanese
Imperialism by analyzing Taiwan Fujinkai
8. An Anarchist Womans ideological
conversion: How Mochizuki Yuriko Became a Nationalist in Manchuria
9.
Statements of "Nanshin Josei" in the 1940s: The Discrepancy between the
Representation of "Nanshin Josei" and Their Narratives Part
4. The Periphery
of Empire
10. Population Movements of Migrant Okinawan Women during the
Development of the Empire: Womens migration from Okinawa to the South Sea
Islands
11. Population Movements of Migrant Okinawan Women during the
Collapse of the Empire: Wartime Repatriation and Okinawan Women in the South
Sea Islands
Tatsuya Kageki is a research associate in the faculty of economics of Keio University. His research focused on developing the history of social thought in modern Japan and East Asia.

Jiajia Yang is an assistant professor in the Research Center for Japanese Language Education and Department of Japanese Language & Literature, College of Foreign Languages and Cultures at Xiamen University. She majors in modern Japanese literature, and comparative literature and culture of Japan and China.