Memories of the Japanese Empire

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anthropology
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civilization
Colonial Administration
colonial anthropology
Colonial Era Buildings
Crossover Generation
Empire
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ethnographic comparison
ethnography
Formosa
Han People
heritage preservation Taiwan
imperial memory studies
Indigenous Peoples
Japan's Colonial Rule
Japanese Ancestry
Japanese Colonial
Japanese Colonial Era
Japanese colonial legacy analysis
Japanese Colonial Period
Japanese Colonial Rule
Japanese Colonialism
Japanese Education
Japanese Era
Japanese Rule
Japan’s Colonial Rule
language
Majuro Atoll
Micronesia
Musha Incident
Oda Project
Pacific decolonisation
Pingtung County
Positive Internalisation
Post-war Taiwan
postwar cultural identity
Roc
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United Nations Trust Territory
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367677466
  • Weight: 462g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 09 Jul 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The contributors to this book examine and compare the colonial and decolonisation experiences of people in Taiwan and Nan’yō Guntō – Micronesia – who underwent periods of rule by the Greater Japanese Empire. Early anthropological theory of Western imperialist countries focused on transforming 'savage' cultures by ruling in a high-handed manner. When Japan asserted its hegemony through sudden colonisation, its culture was perceived as inferior to the civilisation indices previously experienced by those it ruled. How did these ruled nations construct their cultural and historical awareness in areas where the strategic design of Japan’s 'civilising mission' was not convincing? After the end of World War II many emerging countries in the Third World achieved independence through various negotiations or struggles with their former colonial powers and built new relationships with their erstwhile rulers. However, after Japan’s defeat, Taiwan and Nan’yō Guntō became ruled by new foreign governments. How did Japan’s reign and transplanted Japanese culture affect the formation of historical awareness and cultural construction of present-day communities in these two regions? This book provides a fascinating ethnographic insight into the effects of empire and colonisation on the historic imagination, which will be of great interest to historical anthropologists of Taiwan, Japan, and the Pacific.

Yuko MIO is Professor at Keio University. She specialises in the anthropological study of East Asia, with an emphasis on folk religion, and the social memory of subjects of the Japanese administration in Taiwan. Her publications include Historical Ethnography of Wang Ye Worship: The Dynamics of Han Chinese Folk Belief in Taiwan (in Chinese, 2018), written Introduction to: The 5th JASCA International Symposium ‘The Internationalization/Globalization of Anthropology in East Asia: Taiwan and Japan’ (2019) and ‘Domestication of Colonial and War Experience: A Case Study of a Japanese Deified in Taiwan’, (in Japanese, 2017).