Tōhoku Unbounded : : Regional Identity and the Mobile Subject in Prewar Japan / / Anne Giblin Gedacht.

"In 1870, a prominent samurai from Tōhoku sells his castle to become an agrarian colonist in Hokkaidō. Decades later, a man also from northeast Japan stows away on a boat to Canada and establishes a salmon roe business. By 1930, an investigative journalist travels to Brazil and writes a book...

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Superior document:Studies in Global Social History Series ; Volume 48
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Place / Publishing House:Leiden, The Netherlands : : Koninklijke Brill nv,, [2023]
©2023
Year of Publication:2023
Edition:First edition.
Language:English
Series:Studies in global social history ; Volume 48.
Physical Description:1 online resource (290 pages)
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spelling Gedacht, Anne Giblin, author.
Tōhoku Unbounded : Regional Identity and the Mobile Subject in Prewar Japan / Anne Giblin Gedacht.
First edition.
Leiden, The Netherlands : Koninklijke Brill nv, [2023]
©2023
1 online resource (290 pages)
text txt rdacontent
computer c rdamedia
online resource cr rdacarrier
Studies in Global Social History Series ; Volume 48
Half Title -- Series Information -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Preface: Reading Harry Potter in Japan -- Acknowledgements -- List of Figures -- Introduction: Region Matters -- 1 Inside Yet Outside: Tōhoku as Terrestrial Jurisdiction and Tōhoku as Idea -- 2 Transcending Place: Mobile Tōhoku and the Tōhoku Modern -- 3 Historicizing the Mobile Body to Deterritorialize the Japanese State -- 4 Tōhoku Mobility, an Identity in Motion -- Chapter 1 Looking North: Assessing the Boundaries of the Meiji State -- 1 Before Tōhoku: Placing Ōu Cartographically and Politically -- 2 Becoming a Borderland-in-Transition and Catalyzing Frontier-to-Frontier Migration -- 3 Dismantling Ken, Dismembering Maps, and Defining Tōhoku -- 4 Settling Hokkaidō through Patronage: Tōhoku Families Move North -- 5 Repositioning Power through Co-dependence: Date Kunishige in Iburi -- 6 Identifying a Pattern: Regionalism as Cornerstone of Private Settlement -- 7 Mobilized Regionalism and Reframing the Soldier-Settler Villages -- 8 Tondenhei in the Imperial Army: Confounding Loyalties and Readjudicating the Modern -- 9 Pragmatism and the Hokkaidō Modern: Blurring Class and Rising Regionalism -- 10 Conclusion -- Chapter 2 Exporting Regionalism: Tōhoku-Japanese Immigrant Culture -- 1 To Be 'Japanese' Abroad: The Hegemonic Culture of Japan's Southwestern Issei -- 2 Emigrants as Embodiments of National Prestige -- 3 Imagining 'Japan,' Discovering the 'Japanese' -- 4 To Be from Both Japan and 'Tōhoku,' Regionalism from the Outside -- 5 To Be Both Emigrant and Immigrant: The Institutionalization of Difference within Unity -- 6 Tōhoku-Based Kenjinkai in Southern California: Sharing Wealth and Building Community -- 7 Sojourners and Settlers: Building Bridges between Japan and Canada through Kenjinkai -- 8 Conclusion.
Chapter 3 Normalizing the Exceptional: History, Myth, and Memory in Immigrant Ethnicity -- 1 Narrating the Exceptional: History and Mythmaking -- 2 Gannen-Mono and Boshin War Refugees: Revisiting the Wakamatsu Colony -- 3 Martyred Memories: The Ghost of Okei and the Nobility of Failure -- 4 The Roots of Migrant Lineages: 'Fathers of Migration' Narratives -- 5 Katsunuma Tomizō, Progenitor of a Migrant Network -- 6 Oikawa Jinzaburō, Patriarch of a Trans-Pacific Village -- 7 The Afterlives of Oikawa and the Suian Maru Story -- 8 Remembering to Forget: The Filipino-Japanese Community -- 9 Conclusion: Memorialization and Mobilization -- Chapter 4 Writing Domestic Regionalism: Seeking 'Authentic' Tōhoku in Interwar Japan -- 1 Rooting Modernity in Tradition: Seeking Authenticity to Combat Modern Alienation -- 2 "Where Are You From?": Linking People to the Land to Combat Alienation -- 3 Tōhoku and Tōno Monogatari: A Heterochronic Region Outside of Time -- 4 Tōhoku in the In-betweens: Region in International Waters and at Emigration Centers -- 5 The Postwar Satire of Inoue Hisashi: A Tōhoku Native Revisits Tōno Monogatari -- 6 Conclusion -- Chapter 5 "Leading Tōhoku Asia": Regional Identity within Imperial Japan -- 1 Love of Hometown as Love of Nation: Placing Empire through the Periodical Furusato -- 2 Patriotic Emigration to Greater Japan: An Extreme Makeover of the Countryside -- 3 Historicizing Manchurian Emigration: Hokkaidō and 'Father of Migration' Narratives -- 4 Divided Villages: Manufacturing Bridges to Greater East Asia -- 5 Tōhoku at War: Patriotic Expansionism as Regionalist Discourse -- 6 Conclusion: Coupling Patriotic Nationalism to a Mobile Tōhoku Identity -- Epilogue: Tōhoku-damashī: Viewing Regionalism after the Triple Disaster of 11 March 2011 -- Bibliography -- Index.
Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.
"In 1870, a prominent samurai from Tōhoku sells his castle to become an agrarian colonist in Hokkaidō. Decades later, a man also from northeast Japan stows away on a boat to Canada and establishes a salmon roe business. By 1930, an investigative journalist travels to Brazil and writes a book that wins the first-ever Akutagawa Prize. In the 1940s, residents from the same area proclaim that they should lead Imperial Japan in colonizing all of Asia. Across decades and oceans, these fractured narratives seem disparate, but show how mobility is central to the history of Japan's Tōhoku region, a place often stereotyped as a site of rural stasis and traditional immobility, thereby collapsing boundaries between local, national, and global studies of Japan. This book examines how multiple mobilities converge in Japan's supposed hinterland. Drawing on research from three continents, this monograph demonstrates that Tohoku's regional identity is inextricably intertwined with Pacific migrations"-- Provided by publisher.
Description based on print version record.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Migration, Internal Japan Tōhoku Region History.
National characteristics, Japanese.
Regionalism Japan Tōhoku Region History.
Print version: Giblin Gedacht, Anne Tōhoku Unbounded: Regional Identity and the Mobile Subject in Prewar Japan Boston : BRILL,c2022
Studies in global social history ; Volume 48.
language English
format eBook
author Gedacht, Anne Giblin,
spellingShingle Gedacht, Anne Giblin,
Tōhoku Unbounded : Regional Identity and the Mobile Subject in Prewar Japan /
Studies in Global Social History Series ;
Half Title -- Series Information -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Preface: Reading Harry Potter in Japan -- Acknowledgements -- List of Figures -- Introduction: Region Matters -- 1 Inside Yet Outside: Tōhoku as Terrestrial Jurisdiction and Tōhoku as Idea -- 2 Transcending Place: Mobile Tōhoku and the Tōhoku Modern -- 3 Historicizing the Mobile Body to Deterritorialize the Japanese State -- 4 Tōhoku Mobility, an Identity in Motion -- Chapter 1 Looking North: Assessing the Boundaries of the Meiji State -- 1 Before Tōhoku: Placing Ōu Cartographically and Politically -- 2 Becoming a Borderland-in-Transition and Catalyzing Frontier-to-Frontier Migration -- 3 Dismantling Ken, Dismembering Maps, and Defining Tōhoku -- 4 Settling Hokkaidō through Patronage: Tōhoku Families Move North -- 5 Repositioning Power through Co-dependence: Date Kunishige in Iburi -- 6 Identifying a Pattern: Regionalism as Cornerstone of Private Settlement -- 7 Mobilized Regionalism and Reframing the Soldier-Settler Villages -- 8 Tondenhei in the Imperial Army: Confounding Loyalties and Readjudicating the Modern -- 9 Pragmatism and the Hokkaidō Modern: Blurring Class and Rising Regionalism -- 10 Conclusion -- Chapter 2 Exporting Regionalism: Tōhoku-Japanese Immigrant Culture -- 1 To Be 'Japanese' Abroad: The Hegemonic Culture of Japan's Southwestern Issei -- 2 Emigrants as Embodiments of National Prestige -- 3 Imagining 'Japan,' Discovering the 'Japanese' -- 4 To Be from Both Japan and 'Tōhoku,' Regionalism from the Outside -- 5 To Be Both Emigrant and Immigrant: The Institutionalization of Difference within Unity -- 6 Tōhoku-Based Kenjinkai in Southern California: Sharing Wealth and Building Community -- 7 Sojourners and Settlers: Building Bridges between Japan and Canada through Kenjinkai -- 8 Conclusion.
Chapter 3 Normalizing the Exceptional: History, Myth, and Memory in Immigrant Ethnicity -- 1 Narrating the Exceptional: History and Mythmaking -- 2 Gannen-Mono and Boshin War Refugees: Revisiting the Wakamatsu Colony -- 3 Martyred Memories: The Ghost of Okei and the Nobility of Failure -- 4 The Roots of Migrant Lineages: 'Fathers of Migration' Narratives -- 5 Katsunuma Tomizō, Progenitor of a Migrant Network -- 6 Oikawa Jinzaburō, Patriarch of a Trans-Pacific Village -- 7 The Afterlives of Oikawa and the Suian Maru Story -- 8 Remembering to Forget: The Filipino-Japanese Community -- 9 Conclusion: Memorialization and Mobilization -- Chapter 4 Writing Domestic Regionalism: Seeking 'Authentic' Tōhoku in Interwar Japan -- 1 Rooting Modernity in Tradition: Seeking Authenticity to Combat Modern Alienation -- 2 "Where Are You From?": Linking People to the Land to Combat Alienation -- 3 Tōhoku and Tōno Monogatari: A Heterochronic Region Outside of Time -- 4 Tōhoku in the In-betweens: Region in International Waters and at Emigration Centers -- 5 The Postwar Satire of Inoue Hisashi: A Tōhoku Native Revisits Tōno Monogatari -- 6 Conclusion -- Chapter 5 "Leading Tōhoku Asia": Regional Identity within Imperial Japan -- 1 Love of Hometown as Love of Nation: Placing Empire through the Periodical Furusato -- 2 Patriotic Emigration to Greater Japan: An Extreme Makeover of the Countryside -- 3 Historicizing Manchurian Emigration: Hokkaidō and 'Father of Migration' Narratives -- 4 Divided Villages: Manufacturing Bridges to Greater East Asia -- 5 Tōhoku at War: Patriotic Expansionism as Regionalist Discourse -- 6 Conclusion: Coupling Patriotic Nationalism to a Mobile Tōhoku Identity -- Epilogue: Tōhoku-damashī: Viewing Regionalism after the Triple Disaster of 11 March 2011 -- Bibliography -- Index.
author_facet Gedacht, Anne Giblin,
author_variant a g g ag agg
author_role VerfasserIn
author_sort Gedacht, Anne Giblin,
title Tōhoku Unbounded : Regional Identity and the Mobile Subject in Prewar Japan /
title_sub Regional Identity and the Mobile Subject in Prewar Japan /
title_full Tōhoku Unbounded : Regional Identity and the Mobile Subject in Prewar Japan / Anne Giblin Gedacht.
title_fullStr Tōhoku Unbounded : Regional Identity and the Mobile Subject in Prewar Japan / Anne Giblin Gedacht.
title_full_unstemmed Tōhoku Unbounded : Regional Identity and the Mobile Subject in Prewar Japan / Anne Giblin Gedacht.
title_auth Tōhoku Unbounded : Regional Identity and the Mobile Subject in Prewar Japan /
title_new Tōhoku Unbounded :
title_sort tōhoku unbounded : regional identity and the mobile subject in prewar japan /
series Studies in Global Social History Series ;
series2 Studies in Global Social History Series ;
publisher Koninklijke Brill nv,
publishDate 2023
physical 1 online resource (290 pages)
edition First edition.
contents Half Title -- Series Information -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Preface: Reading Harry Potter in Japan -- Acknowledgements -- List of Figures -- Introduction: Region Matters -- 1 Inside Yet Outside: Tōhoku as Terrestrial Jurisdiction and Tōhoku as Idea -- 2 Transcending Place: Mobile Tōhoku and the Tōhoku Modern -- 3 Historicizing the Mobile Body to Deterritorialize the Japanese State -- 4 Tōhoku Mobility, an Identity in Motion -- Chapter 1 Looking North: Assessing the Boundaries of the Meiji State -- 1 Before Tōhoku: Placing Ōu Cartographically and Politically -- 2 Becoming a Borderland-in-Transition and Catalyzing Frontier-to-Frontier Migration -- 3 Dismantling Ken, Dismembering Maps, and Defining Tōhoku -- 4 Settling Hokkaidō through Patronage: Tōhoku Families Move North -- 5 Repositioning Power through Co-dependence: Date Kunishige in Iburi -- 6 Identifying a Pattern: Regionalism as Cornerstone of Private Settlement -- 7 Mobilized Regionalism and Reframing the Soldier-Settler Villages -- 8 Tondenhei in the Imperial Army: Confounding Loyalties and Readjudicating the Modern -- 9 Pragmatism and the Hokkaidō Modern: Blurring Class and Rising Regionalism -- 10 Conclusion -- Chapter 2 Exporting Regionalism: Tōhoku-Japanese Immigrant Culture -- 1 To Be 'Japanese' Abroad: The Hegemonic Culture of Japan's Southwestern Issei -- 2 Emigrants as Embodiments of National Prestige -- 3 Imagining 'Japan,' Discovering the 'Japanese' -- 4 To Be from Both Japan and 'Tōhoku,' Regionalism from the Outside -- 5 To Be Both Emigrant and Immigrant: The Institutionalization of Difference within Unity -- 6 Tōhoku-Based Kenjinkai in Southern California: Sharing Wealth and Building Community -- 7 Sojourners and Settlers: Building Bridges between Japan and Canada through Kenjinkai -- 8 Conclusion.
Chapter 3 Normalizing the Exceptional: History, Myth, and Memory in Immigrant Ethnicity -- 1 Narrating the Exceptional: History and Mythmaking -- 2 Gannen-Mono and Boshin War Refugees: Revisiting the Wakamatsu Colony -- 3 Martyred Memories: The Ghost of Okei and the Nobility of Failure -- 4 The Roots of Migrant Lineages: 'Fathers of Migration' Narratives -- 5 Katsunuma Tomizō, Progenitor of a Migrant Network -- 6 Oikawa Jinzaburō, Patriarch of a Trans-Pacific Village -- 7 The Afterlives of Oikawa and the Suian Maru Story -- 8 Remembering to Forget: The Filipino-Japanese Community -- 9 Conclusion: Memorialization and Mobilization -- Chapter 4 Writing Domestic Regionalism: Seeking 'Authentic' Tōhoku in Interwar Japan -- 1 Rooting Modernity in Tradition: Seeking Authenticity to Combat Modern Alienation -- 2 "Where Are You From?": Linking People to the Land to Combat Alienation -- 3 Tōhoku and Tōno Monogatari: A Heterochronic Region Outside of Time -- 4 Tōhoku in the In-betweens: Region in International Waters and at Emigration Centers -- 5 The Postwar Satire of Inoue Hisashi: A Tōhoku Native Revisits Tōno Monogatari -- 6 Conclusion -- Chapter 5 "Leading Tōhoku Asia": Regional Identity within Imperial Japan -- 1 Love of Hometown as Love of Nation: Placing Empire through the Periodical Furusato -- 2 Patriotic Emigration to Greater Japan: An Extreme Makeover of the Countryside -- 3 Historicizing Manchurian Emigration: Hokkaidō and 'Father of Migration' Narratives -- 4 Divided Villages: Manufacturing Bridges to Greater East Asia -- 5 Tōhoku at War: Patriotic Expansionism as Regionalist Discourse -- 6 Conclusion: Coupling Patriotic Nationalism to a Mobile Tōhoku Identity -- Epilogue: Tōhoku-damashī: Viewing Regionalism after the Triple Disaster of 11 March 2011 -- Bibliography -- Index.
isbn 9789004527942
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dewey-tens 300 - Social sciences, sociology & anthropology
dewey-ones 304 - Factors affecting social behavior
dewey-full 304.80952
dewey-sort 3304.80952
dewey-raw 304.80952
dewey-search 304.80952
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