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Tōhoku Unbounded: Regional Identity and the Mobile Subject in Prewar Japan

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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...
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  • 08 December 2022
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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.
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Price: $145.00
Pages: 274
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Studies in Global Migration History
Publication Date: 08 December 2022
ISBN: 9789004527935
Format: Hardcover
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Anne Giblin Gedacht, Ph.D., (2015), UW-Madison, is Assistant Professor of Modern Japanese History at Seton Hall University. She has published in the Journal of Social History and the Japan Studies Review.