Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-tf8b9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T03:30:40.088Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Northern Lights: The Making and Unmaking of Karafuto Identity

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 March 2010

Get access

Extract

In the context of the japanese colonial empire, debates about colonial identity have tended to focus on the relationship between Japanese rulers and non-Japanese colonial subjects. The main problems for analysis have been the development of assimilationist and/or discriminatory policies toward colonized peoples, and the way in which the colonized—Koreans, Taiwanese, Micronesians, and others—resisted or adapted to the pressures of those policies. It is perhaps for this reason that rather little scholarly work has been published, in Japanese or in English, about the history of the Japanese colony of Karafuto, which was, after all, overwhelmingly a settler colony. By the mid-1930s, the colony had just over three hundred thousand inhabitants, of whom the vast majority were recent migrants from Japan, though official statistics also record the presence of some two hundred Russians, around two thousand indigenous people—mostly Ainu, Uilta and Nivkh—and almost six thousand Koreans, a group whose numbers were to grow very rapidly from the late 1930s to the mid-1940s. Very recently, however, increasing attention has begun to be directed to the complex, contested, and paradoxical process of identity formation amongst various groups of Japanese colonizers, especially amongst those Japanese who were born or brought up in the colonies (Kawamura 1994; 2000; Tomiyama 1997; Young 1998; Tamanoi 2000). In this context, Karafuto—as a predominantly settler colony—has a particularly interesting story to tell.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Association for Asian Studies, Inc. 2001

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

List of References

Toshiyuki, Akizuki. 1994. Nichirō kankei to Saharintō [Russo-Japanese relations and the island of Sakhalin]. Tokyo: Chikuma Shobō.Google Scholar
Chan-Hwa, Choe. 1975. Kokuseki to jinken [Nationality and human rights]. Tokyo: Sakai Shoten.Google Scholar
Fraerman, R. 1958. “Vas'ka Gilyak.” [Vas'ka the Gilyak]. In Izbrannoe [Selections]. 116233. Moscow: Sovetskii Pisatel'.Google Scholar
Friis, Herman R. 1939. “Pioneer Economy of Sakhalin Island.” Economic Geography 15(1):5579.Google Scholar
Healy, Chris. 1997. From the Ruins of Colonialism: History as Social Memory. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Hirowatari, S. 1993. “Foreigners and the ‘Foreigners Question’ under Japanese Law.” Annals of the Institute of Social Science 35:91122Google Scholar
Yuichi, Hishinuma. 1938. Karafuto annai chimei no tabi [A travel guide to Karafuto and a journey through Karafuto place-names]. Tokyo: Chūō Jōhō Sha.Google Scholar
Hokkaidō Taimusu nenkan [Hokkaido Times annual]. 1942. Sapporo: Hokkaido Taimusu Sha.Google Scholar
‘“Hokkyoku kō’ sutōrT“[The story of “Northern Lights”]. 1941. Karafuto Chōhō 49: 6572.Google Scholar
Howell, David. 1995. Capitalism from Within: Economy, State, and Society in a Japanese Fishery. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Munenori, Ikeda. 1938. “‘Karafuto no tabi’ no hihan ni atau” [Towards a critique of “A Karafuto Journey“]. Karafuto (December): 103–07.Google Scholar
Sadao, Imamura, et al. 1941. “Chihō bunka to eiga—zandankai“[Local culture and films—a round-table discussion]. Karafuto 13(3):114–21.Google Scholar
Kantorovich, Vladimir. 1971. Sakhalinskaya Povest’ [A tale of Sakhalin]. Moscow: Khudozhestvennaya Literatura.Google Scholar
Kenkyukai, Karafuto Ainu Shi, ed. 1992. Tsuishikari ni ishibumi [A monument to Ishikari]. Sapporo: Hokkaidō Shuppan Kikaku Sentā.Google Scholar
Chō, Karafuto. 1936. Karafuto shashinchō [Karafuto photograph album]. Toyohara: Karafuto Chō.Google Scholar
Chō, Karafuto. [1936] 1973. Karafuto Chō shisei sanjūnen shi [The thirty year history of the Karafuto Regional Administration]. 2 vols. Tokyo: Hara Shobō.Google Scholar
Keisatsubu, Karafuto Chō. [1929] 1990. “Karafuto zairyū Chōsenjin ippan” [An outline of the situation of Korean residents in Karafuto]. In Nihon shokuminchika no Zainichi Chōsenjin no jōkyō [The Japanese colonialism and the situation of resident Koreans in Japan], vol. 12, edited by Kyon-Chik, Pak. Tokyo: Ajia Mondai Kenkyūjo.Google Scholar
Jimusho, Karafuto Chō Tetsudō. 1928. Karafuto no tetsudōryokōannai [A travel guide to Karafuto railways]. Tokyo: Karafuto Chō.Google Scholar
Shashinkai, Karafuto Kyōdo, ed. 1934. Karafuto kyōdo shashinchō [Karafuto homeland photograph album]. Toyohara: Karafuto Kyödo Shashinkai.Google Scholar
Minato, Kawamura. 1994. Nanyō, Karafuto no Nihon bungaku [Japanese literature in the South Seas and Karafuto]. Tokyol: Chikuma Shobō.Google Scholar
Minato, Kawamura. 2000. Sakubun no naka no Dai-Nihon Teikoku [The Japanese Empire in literary works]. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten.Google Scholar
Naohiro, Kihara. 1994. Karafuto bungaku no tabi [A journey through Karafuto literature]. Vol. 1. Sapporo: Kyōdō Bunkasha.Google Scholar
Alko, Kitagawa. 1997. “’Otasu’ no kurashi to watashi” [Life in “Otasu” and my experiences]. In Karafuto 1905–1945: Nihonryō jidai no shōsō minzoku [Karafuto 1905–1945: ethnic minorities in the period of Japanese rule], edited by the Hakubustukan, Hokkaidō Dōritsu Hoppō Minzoku. Abashiri: Hokkaidō Dōritsu Hoppō Minzoku Hakubutsukan.Google Scholar
Eizō, Koyama. 1937. Senden gijutsu ron [A theory of propaganda techniques]. Tokyo: Kōyō Shoin.Google Scholar
Kuzin, Anatolii. 1993. Dal'nevostochnye Koreitsy: zhizny i tragediya sud'by [Koreans in far eastern Russia: their lives and tragic destiny]. Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk: Literaturno-Izdatel'skoe Obedinenie “LIK.”Google Scholar
Kaisha, Mitsubishi Gōshi. nd. Kyokuhoku [The far north]. Tokyo: Mitsubishi Gōshi Kaisha.Google Scholar
Morris-Suzuki, Tessa. 1998. “Becoming Japanese: Imperial Expansion and Identity Crises in the Early Twentieth Century.” In Japan's Competing Modernities: Issues in Culture and Democracy 1900–1930, edited by Minichiello, Sharon A.. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press.Google Scholar
Morris-Suzuki, Tessa. 2000. Henkyō kara nagameru: Ainu ga keiken suru kindai [The view from the frontier: The Ainu experience and modernity]. Tokyo: Misuzu Shobō.Google Scholar
Gakamuka, Naimubu. 1937. “Kokumin seishin sōdōin undo to wa nani ka“[What is the National Spiritual Mobilization Movement?] Karafuto Chōhō 6 (October):7790.Google Scholar
Kyōkai, Nihon Eiga Zasshi, ed. 1941 Eiga nenkan 1941 [Cinema annual 1941]. Tokyo: Nihon Eiga Zasshi Kyökai.Google Scholar
Masahiko, Nishi. 1997. Mori no gerirà: Miyazawa Kenji [A forest guerilla: Miyazawa Kenji]. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten.Google Scholar
Roon, Tat'yana. 1996. Ul'ta Sakhalina: Istoriko-Etnograficheskoe Issledovanie Traditsionnogo Khozyaistva i Material'noi Kul'tury [The Uilta of Sakhalin: an historical and ethnographic study of their traditional economy and material culture]. Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk: Sakhalinskoe Oblastnoe Knizhnoe Izdatel'stvo.Google Scholar
Kōtarō, Samukawa. 1941a. “Karafuto kikō: Nosutarujia Sagaren“[A Karafuto journey: nostalgic Sakhalin]. In Kusabito. Tokyo: Chōō Kōronsha.Google Scholar
Kōtarō, Samukawa. 1941b. “Kusabito” [The grass man]. In Kusabito. Tokyo: Chōō Kōronsha.Google Scholar
Satō, Tadao. 1997. Le Cinéma Japonais [The Japanese cinema] Vol. 1. Paris: Editions du Centre Pompidou.Google Scholar
Sevela, Mariya. 1998. “Sakhalin: The Japanese under Soviet Rule.” History Today:4146.Google Scholar
Stephan, John. 1971. Sakhalin: A History. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Jun'ichi, Takahashi. 1933. “Nōbokugyō“[Agriculture and animal husbandry]. In Chiri kōza: Nihon hen 1 —Karafuto, Hokkaidō [Lectures on geography: Japan 1—Karafuto and Hokkaido], edited by Sanzō, Yamamoto. Tokyo: Kaizōsha.Google Scholar
Tazō, Takahashi. 1938. “Kyōdo ni okeru kagaku bunka ni tsuite” [On Scientific culture in our homeland]. Hoppō bunka 1(2):52.Google Scholar
Taksami, Chuner Mikhailovich. 1967. Nivkhi: Sovremennoe Khozyaistvo, Kul'tura i Byt [The Nivkh: contemporary economy, culture, and existence]. Leningrad: Nauka.Google Scholar
Asano, Tamanoi Mariko. 2000. “Knowledge, Power, and Racial Classifications: The ‘Japanese’ in Manchuria.” Journal of Asian Studies 59(2):248–76.Google Scholar
Shizue, Tamura. 2000. Hajime ni eiga ga atta: Shokuminchi Taiwan to Nihon [In the beginning was the film: colonial Taiwan and Japan]. Tokyo: Chōō Kōrōnsha.Google Scholar
Ryō, Tanaka. 1993. Saharin hokui gojōdo sen [Sakhalin: latitude fifty degrees north]. Tokyo: Kusa no Ne Shuppankai.Google Scholar
Ryō, Tanaka, and Gendānu, Dahinien. 1978. Gendānu: Aru hoppōshōsū minzoku no dorama [Gendānu: the drama of a northern ethnic minority]. Tokyo: Gendaishi Shuppankai.Google Scholar
Tomiyama, Ichirō. 1997. “Colonialism and the Sciences of the Tropical Zone: The Academic Analysis of Difference in the ‘Island Peoples’.” In Formations of Colonial Identity in East Asia, edited by Barlow, Tani E.. Durham: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Vishinevskii, Nikolai. 1994. Otasu. Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk: Dal'nevostochnoe Knizhnoe Izdatel'stvo.Google Scholar
Vysokov, M. S., et al. 1995. Istoriya Sakhalinskoi Oblasti s Drevneishikh Vremen do Nashikh Dnei [A history of the Sakhalin region from the earliest times to the present day]. Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk: Sakhalinskii Tsentr Dokumentatsii Noveishei Istorii.Google Scholar
White, Richard. 1981. Inventing Australia. Sydney: Allen and Unwin.Google Scholar
Yamaguchi, Takeshi. 1989. Maboroshi no kinema man'ei: Amakasu Masahiko to katsudōya gunzō (Manchuria films—the phantom cinema]. Tokyo: Heibonsha.Google Scholar
Young, Louise. 1998. Japan's Total Empire: Manchuria and the Culture of Wartime Imperialism. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Masako, Yuzurihara. 1949. “Chosen yaki” [The lynching of Koreans]. ShinNihon bungaku [New Japanese literature] (April):5968.Google Scholar
Masako, Yuzurihara. [1939] 1985. Sakuhoku no tatakai [The fight for the north], Tokyo: Döseisha.Google Scholar
Renmei, Zenkoku Karafuto. 1965. Karafuto hikiage dōhai no genkyō [The current situation of Karafuto returnees]. Tokyo: Zenkoku Karafuto Renmei.Google Scholar