Počet záznamů: 1
Going to Manchuria. Imperial Japan, migrant workers, and the mobilization of Tokyo
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SYSNO ASEP 0564449 Druh ASEP C - Konferenční příspěvek (mezinárodní konf.) Zařazení RIV D - Článek ve sborníku Název Going to Manchuria. Imperial Japan, migrant workers, and the mobilization of Tokyo Tvůrce(i) Toyosawa, Nobuko (OU-W) SAI, ORCID Zdroj.dok. The Twelfth International Convention of Asia Scholars (ICAS 12). - neuveden : Amsterdam University Press, 2022 / van der Velde P. ; van den Haak M. ; Riangkruar N. - ISBN 9789048557820 Rozsah stran s. 709-714 Poč.str. 6 s. Forma vydání Online - E Akce International Convention of Asia Scholars /12./ (ICAS 12) Datum konání 24.08.2021 - 28.08.2021 Místo konání Kyoto Země JP - Japonsko Typ akce WRD Jazyk dok. eng - angličtina Klíč. slova East Asia ; emigration ; history ; Japanese Empire ; Manchuria ; Tokyo Manmō kaitakudan Obor OECD History (history of science and technology to be 6.3, history of specific sciences to be under the respective headings) Institucionální podpora OU-W - RVO:68378009 UT WOS 000865764900082 DOI 10.5117/9789048557820/ICAS.2022.082 Anotace The emigration movement to Manchuria began in full scale with the establishment of Manchukuo in 1932, when approximately 300,000 Japanese people migrated to northeastern China to the end of the war. Recent scholarship on Manchuria has focused on non-state, non-elite actors, unlike postwar scholarship that centered its attention on national economic and political elites in order to critique the governing structures and their operation. Following this trend, this paper explores the settlers from Tokyo who were poor but dreamed about renewing their lives in Manchuria, thereby supporting the Japanese empire. Considering the sheer number of settlers who participated in the emigration movement, cases of Tokyo might not reflect largely on the national efforts. However, Tokyo occupied an indispensable place in the emigration campaign by modeling the patterns and structures that would form the national agenda. This paper examines why many people willingly supported the occupation of foreign land and analyzes the complex apparatus that structured and managed the mobilization operation without imposing a cohesive authoritarian regime. The paper concludes that what enabled such popular participation was a widespread culture of imperialism made evident in the action of the poor Japanese citizens who chose to become farmers in Manchuria. Pracoviště Orientální ústav Kontakt Zuzana Kvapilová, kvapilova@orient.cas.cz, Tel.: 266 053 950 Rok sběru 2023 Elektronická adresa https://www.aup-online.com/docserver/fulltext/29496721/9789048557820/082.pdf?expires=1680265157&id=id&accname=guest&checksum=74E560B17A4CF6A30228B0B0B1D9FF7D
Počet záznamů: 1