战后日本归国:从帝国臣民到战后公民

IF 0.4 4区 社会学 0 ASIAN STUDIES Sungkyun Journal of East Asian Studies Pub Date : 2020-04-01 DOI:10.21866/ESJEAS.2020.20.1.005
Yi-jin Park
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要:本文以Kikansha hikkei为研究对象,探讨了冷战与日本归国人员的关系帰還者必携 (《归国人员手册》),教育、科学和文化部于1949年6月1日编制的出版物。本文着重分析《菊见义行》的内容,以阐明战后日本民主与再民族化的意义,并表明以往研究中从战争史、殖民地人民的苦难以及前后的连续性和不连续性等方面来看的海归元史,都源于新的“文化冷战”。“日本战后的重组寻求军国主义元素的民主化,因此,对战前和战后连续性和不连续性的批判性研究集中在战后改革和/或非殖民化批判中的帝国(殖民地)历史上。在这种背景下,当时日本政府对海归的基本观点似乎是,与旧的“战前”制度——帝国主义和殖民主义——直接接触的海归应该被重新国有化,成为“新日本”的公民,日本当局的意图不仅仅是将前帝国的臣民重组为战后日本的公民;回归者还被要求成为实现自由民主的主要现代化推动者——冷战时期的另一种战士。
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Re-nationalizing Repatriated Japanese into Post-War Japan: From Imperial Subjects to Post-War Citizens
ABSTRACT:This paper examines the relationship between the Cold War and returnees to Japan based on Kikansha hikkei 帰還者必携 (Handbook for returnees), a publication prepared by the Ministry of Education, Science, and Culture on June 1, 1949. This analysis focuses on the contents of Kikansha hikkei in order to clarify the meaning of democracy and re-nationalization in post-war Japan and show that the metahistory of returnees—viewed in previous research in terms of war history, the sufferings of people in colonized areas, and pre- and post-war continuities and discontinuities—originated in the new “Cultural Cold War.” Japan’s post-war reorganization sought the democratization of militaristic elements, and for this reason critical research on preand post-war continuities and discontinuities has centered on postwar reforms and/or imperial (colonial) history within the critique of decolonization. In this context, the basic perspective of the Japanese government toward returnees at the time seems to have been that overseas returnees living in direct contact with the old “pre-war” systems—empire and colonialism—should be re-nationalized as citizens of the “new Japan.” In this process, however, the Japanese authorities did not mean merely to reorganize subjects of the former empire into citizens of post-war Japan; returnees were also required to become the principle modernizing agents in realizing liberal democracy—another kind of warrior in the Cold War.
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