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This is a pioneering work on "karayuki-san", impoverished Japanese
women sent abroad to work as prostitutes from the 1860s to the
1920s. The narrative follows the life of one such prostitute,
Osaki, who is persuaded as a child of ten to accept cleaning work
in Sandakan, North Borneo, and then forced to work as a prostitute
in a Japanese brothel, one of the many such brothels that were
established throughout Asia in conjunction with the expansion of
Japanese business interests. Yamazaki views Osaki as the embodiment
of the suffering experienced by all Japanese women, who have long
been oppressed under the dual yoke of class and gender. This tale
provides the historical and anthropological context for
understanding the sexual exploitation of Asian women before and
during the Pacific War and for the growing flesh trade in Southeast
Asia and Japan today. Young women are being brought to Japan with
the same false promises that enticed Osaki to Borneo 80 years ago.
Yamazaki Tomoko, who herself endured many economic and social
hardships during and after the war, has devoted her life to
documenting the history of the exchange of women between Japan and
other Asian countries since 1868. She has worked directly with
"karayuki-san", military comfort women, war orphans, repatriates,
women sent as picture brides to China and Manchuria, Asian women
who have wed into Japanese farming communities, and Japanese women
married to other Asians in Japan.
This is a pioneering work on "karayuki-san", impoverished Japanese
women sent abroad to work as prostitutes from the 1860s to the
1920s. The narrative follows the life of one such prostitute,
Osaki, who is persuaded as a child of ten to accept cleaning work
in Sandakan, North Borneo, and then forced to work as a prostitute
in a Japanese brothel, one of the many such brothels that were
established throughout Asia in conjunction with the expansion of
Japanese business interests. Yamazaki views Osaki as the embodiment
of the suffering experienced by all Japanese women, who have long
been oppressed under the dual yoke of class and gender. This tale
provides the historical and anthropological context for
understanding the sexual exploitation of Asian women before and
during the Pacific War and for the growing flesh trade in Southeast
Asia and Japan today. Young women are being brought to Japan with
the same false promises that enticed Osaki to Borneo 80 years ago.
Yamazaki Tomoko, who herself endured many economic and social
hardships during and after the war, has devoted her life to
documenting the history of the exchange of women between Japan and
other Asian countries since 1868. She has worked directly with
"karayuki-san", military comfort women, war orphans, repatriates,
women sent as picture brides to China and Manchuria, Asian women
who have wed into Japanese farming communities, and Japanese women
married to other Asians in Japan.
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