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Geographies of Gender
Family and Law in Imperial Japan and Colonial Taiwan
Ishikawa explores gender, family, and law with a focus on interwar Japan's international and colonial relations in Taiwan.
Tadashi Ishikawa (Author)
9781009534178, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 23 January 2025
298 pages
23.5 x 15.8 x 2.1 cm, 0.58 kg
'A fascinating study of family life, legal culture, and gender politics during a period of rapid and uneven social change in East Asia. Ishikawa's meticulous examination of public discourse, court documents, and the imperial archive deepens our understanding of everyday life in colonial Taiwan during the early twentieth-century, while bringing to light hitherto ignored stories and historical actors.' Paul Barclay, Lafayette College
Tadashi Ishikawa traces perceptions and practices of gender in the Japanese empire on the occasion of Japan's colonisation of Taiwan from 1895 . In the 1910s, metropolitan and colonial authorities attempted social reform in ways which particularly impacted on family traditions and, therefore, gender relations, paving the way for the politics of comparison within and beyond the empire. In Geographies of Gender, Tadashi Ishikawa delves into a variety of diplomatic issues, colonial and anticolonial discourses, and judicial cases, finding marriage gifts, daughter adoption, and premarital sexual relationships to be sites of tension between norms and ideals among both elite and ordinary men and women. He explores how the Japanese empire became a gendered space from the 1910s through the outbreak of the Second Sino-Japanese War in 1937, arguing that gender norms were both unsettled and reinforced in ways which highlight the instability of metropole-colony relations.
Introduction
1. The woman question and interwar Japan's international engagements
2. Empire apart, empire together
3. Becoming a Taiwanese man
4. When the hearth was at once warm and cold
5. Freedom in a state of flux
6. Stories marginal women wove
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index.
Subject Areas: Asian history [HBJF]
