When Empire Comes Home: Repatriation and Reintegration in Postwar Japan

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Harvard University Press, 2010 - 238 pages
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Following the end of World War II in Asia, the Allied powers repatriated over six million Japanese nationals from colonies and battlefields throughout Asia and deported more than a million colonial subjects from Japan to their countries of origin.

Depicted at the time as a postwar measure related to the demobilization of defeated Japanese soldiers, this population transfer was a central element in the human dismantling of the Japanese empire that resonates with other post-colonial and post-imperial migrations in the twentieth century.

Lori Watt analyzes how the human remnants of empire, those who were moved and those who were left behind, served as sites of negotiation in the process of the jettisoning of the colonial project and in the creation of new national identities in Japan. Through an exploration of the creation and uses of the figure of the repatriate, in political, social, and cultural realms, this study addresses the question of what happens when empire comes home.

 

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Though rather short this monograph seems to do a fine job of putting the experience of the Japanese "Repatriates" into perspective from demographic, sociological and cultural angles. The irony in this ... Consulter l'avis complet

Table des matières

New Maps of Asia
19
The CoProduction of the Repatriate 194549
56
The Future of the Japanese Race and Argumentative Typi
98
Reception at Home
111
The Return of the Red Repatriates 1949
126
Soviet Detainees as Repatriates
134
In the End It Was the Japanese Who Got
139
Orphans and Women
167
The Movement for Compensation
173
Bureaucratic Efforts in Ending Repatriation
183
Third Party Decolonization
191
Works Cited
211
Index
233
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À propos de l'auteur (2010)

Lori Watt is Assistant Professor of History at Washington University in St. Louis.

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