In April 1952, Japan emerged from Allied occupation free, peaceful, and democratic. Japan’s presses marked the occasion by declaring a state of crisis: the “konketsuji [mixed-blood children] crisis.” By all accounts, Allied soldiers had sired and abandoned two hundred thousand “mixed-blood” orphans in Japan. However, Chapter One reveals this to be a fabricated crisis or “moral panic.” Surveys found only a few thousand konketsuji nationwide, very few of them orphans. Yet these discoveries did little to change the tenor of “crisis.” Opposition politicians deployed wrath and fear over “blood mixing” to discredit the dominant Liberal Party and its alliance with the United States. They were abetted by an array of postwar activists who used the ...
Japan is undoubtedly one of the foremost economic powers in the world and is internationally recogni...
This article outlines what Japanese women have demanded and worked for after World War II.During the...
In the modern Japanese history, Okinawa has always been marginalized: sometimes excluded from the na...
Japan’s unusual postwar reproductive policy has been examined in the past using religion and interes...
This dissertation aims to answer comprehensively the simple, yet significant question of why and how...
As the number of mixed race people grows in Japan, anxieties about miscegenation in today's context ...
textThis thesis is in response to scholarly works on Japanese society and the ideal of the monoethni...
This essay examines the entanglement between population science and population governance immediatel...
This thesis examines how the anti-Japanese sentiment and legislation promoted by those leading the A...
This research paper discusses the origins of Japan’s fertility crisis and analyzes the government’s ...
Following the unconditional surrender of Japan on September 2, 1945, the Allied forces set out to es...
On 25 August 1945, ten days after the defeat, Japanese feminists gathered to discuss suffrage and th...
Even though the Pacific Ocean stands as an aqueous wall between Japan and the United States, World W...
The birthrate decline (shōshika) of Japan is seen as a social crisis that may, without intervention,...
This paper analyses the various modes in which Zainichi, ethnic Koreans who have lived in Japan for ...
Japan is undoubtedly one of the foremost economic powers in the world and is internationally recogni...
This article outlines what Japanese women have demanded and worked for after World War II.During the...
In the modern Japanese history, Okinawa has always been marginalized: sometimes excluded from the na...
Japan’s unusual postwar reproductive policy has been examined in the past using religion and interes...
This dissertation aims to answer comprehensively the simple, yet significant question of why and how...
As the number of mixed race people grows in Japan, anxieties about miscegenation in today's context ...
textThis thesis is in response to scholarly works on Japanese society and the ideal of the monoethni...
This essay examines the entanglement between population science and population governance immediatel...
This thesis examines how the anti-Japanese sentiment and legislation promoted by those leading the A...
This research paper discusses the origins of Japan’s fertility crisis and analyzes the government’s ...
Following the unconditional surrender of Japan on September 2, 1945, the Allied forces set out to es...
On 25 August 1945, ten days after the defeat, Japanese feminists gathered to discuss suffrage and th...
Even though the Pacific Ocean stands as an aqueous wall between Japan and the United States, World W...
The birthrate decline (shōshika) of Japan is seen as a social crisis that may, without intervention,...
This paper analyses the various modes in which Zainichi, ethnic Koreans who have lived in Japan for ...
Japan is undoubtedly one of the foremost economic powers in the world and is internationally recogni...
This article outlines what Japanese women have demanded and worked for after World War II.During the...
In the modern Japanese history, Okinawa has always been marginalized: sometimes excluded from the na...