<departmental bulletin paper>
Where did the fleeing Koreans go ? : Escape as remobilization and relocation of Koreans mobilized in wartime Japan
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Abstract | This paper examines the issue of escaping Korean laborers, who had been mobilized from the Korean Peninsula, focusing on the case of Fukuoka Prefecture. Koreans traveling to Japan for work had increas...ed after World War I. It increased dramatically after the mass transfer of Koreans began in earnest in September 1939 under the Labor Mobilization Plan. Wartime mobilization, here, refers to the collective transfer, which began following the labor mobilization plan. Did Korean laborers flee the mines because they could not bear the violence and oppression? That might have been true. In many cases, with the help of intermediary Korean agents, they fled (moved) to other workplaces and obtained jobs there. This served as a labor black market. The construction industry, for example, benefited from this. The Army, which had placed the order, was no exception. The policy of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, designed to prevent escape, was, in effect, an acknowledgment of this reality.show more |
Table of Contents | はじめに ― 本稿の課題 ― 1 移住朝鮮人労働者の逃走=再移動の状況 2 逃走と朝鮮人コミュニティ 3 労働者の再移動と定着のシステム 4 労務管理言説と実態 結論 〔後記〕 |
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Created Date | 2022.09.01 |
Modified Date | 2022.09.05 |