Japan's Minorities: The Illusion of HomogeneityEarly Childhood Education Consultant Michael Weiner, Michael Weiner Routledge, 2008年11月19日 - 272 頁 Provides clear historical introductions to the six principal ethnic minority groups in Japan, including the Ainu, Chinese, Koreans and Okinawans, and discusses their place in contemporary Japanese society. |
內容
1 Self and other in imperial Japan | 1 |
2 The Ainu | 21 |
3 Mixedblood Japanese | 40 |
4 Burakumin in contemporary Japan | 59 |
5 The other other | 84 |
Chinese newcomers in Japan | 116 |
其他版本 - 查看全部
常見字詞
African American Ainu culture argued Asian assimilation Brazil Brazilian nikkeijin buraku communities Buraku Liberation burakumin century China Chinese immigrants Chinese in Japan Chösenjin civil co-living colonial contemporary discourse discrimination Dowa economic ethnic European exhibition factory foreign gaikokujin global groups hibakusha Hiroshima Hokkaido homogeneity human rights ideology images imperial indigenous issues Japanese nationals Japanese society Japanese-Brazilians Kiroku Konketsuji Korean hibakusha koseki labor leprosy living marginalization Matsumae Matsumae domain Meiji Meiji period migration military Minami Ministry minority minzoku mixed-blood children modern movement multicultural Multiethnic Japan museums Nagasaki nature Nihon Nihonjin nikkeijin official Okinawa Osaka outcaste overseas Chinese period permanent residents political population position post-war prefecture prejudice problem race racial racism relations relationship returnees Routledge Ryükyü Shinbun Siddle social status Suiheisha Tokugawa Tokyo trade transnational United Utari Wagatsuma Wajin Western workers World Zainichi Korean