Abstract
This article explores the role of affect and sentiment in shaping cross-cultural encounters in late colonial Korea, as seen and experienced through the eyes of Japanese men and women who grew up in Seoul. By interleaving the oral and written testimonies of former settlers who came of age on the peninsula between the late 1920s and the end of colonial ride in 1945, the paper attempts to reconstruct their emotional journey into adulthood as young offspring of empire: specifically, how they apprehended colonialism, what they felt when encountering different segments of the Korean population, and in what ways their understanding of the world and themselves changed as a result of these interactions. Focusing on the intimate and, everyday zones of contact in family and school life, this study more broadly offers a way to understand colonialism without reducing complex local interactions to abstract mechanisms of capital and bureaucratic rule.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Title of host publication | Social Organization |
| Publisher | Taylor and Francis |
| Pages | 527-550 |
| Number of pages | 24 |
| Volume | 1 |
| ISBN (Electronic) | 9781351882774 |
| ISBN (Print) | 9781409433972 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - 2 Mar 2017 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© Owen White 2013.
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