HARVARD EAST ASIAN MONOGRAPHS
Cover: Brokers of Empire: Japanese Settler Colonialism in Korea, 1876–1945, from Harvard University Press Cover: Brokers of Empire in HARDCOVER

Harvard East Asian Monographs 337

Brokers of Empire

Japanese Settler Colonialism in Korea, 1876–1945

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Book Details

HARDCOVER

$49.95 • £36.95 • €45.00

ISBN 9780674062535

Publication: December 2011

Text

500 pages

6 x 9 inches

12 halftones, 4 maps, 6 tables

Harvard University Asia Center > Harvard East Asian Monographs

World, subsidiary rights restricted

This well-researched and elegantly written social history of Japanese settlers in colonial Korea fills a critical void. Much has been written on the political history of Japan’s expansion into and annexation of Korea and the Korean experience under Japanese colonial rule, but Japanese settlers hardly feature in the history of Japanese colonialism in Korea. Drawing on Korean and Japanese primary sources, Uchida crafts a bottom-up narrative of Japanese colonialism in Korea, portraying Japanese settlers as both vanguards of and obstacles to Japanese colonial rule. Settlers’ interests did not always align with the colonial state’s interests. According to Uchida, the volatile relationship between settlers and the colonial state partly stems from the group’s social composition. More like French settlers in Algiers than British settlers in Kenya, Japanese settlers in Korea were mostly from lower social classes, and were mostly concerned with improving their own conditions. In spite of their humble social origins, there were several success stories about those who built business empires or established themselves in journalism or politics. The inclusion of these settlers’ biographies highlights individual experiences often lost in the state-centered narratives of colonial expansion.—L. Teh, Choice