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Interventions
International Journal of Postcolonial Studies
Volume 19, 2017 - Issue 8
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Articles

Interrogating the ‘Population Problem’ of the Non-Western Empire: Japanese Colonialism, the Korean Peninsula, and the Global Geopolitics of Race

 

Abstract

This paper examines the colonial discourse of the global population problem in Korea under Japanese rule (1910–1945). I consider the recent call of Alison Bashford to draw attention to the geopolitical and spatial dimensions of the colonial population discourse in the non-Western Japanese Empire and to interrogate global population from the perspective of East Asian imperialism in the twentieth century. By opening up the colonial archives on population through an examination of colonial state and pro-state magazines in Korea, such as Chōsen (Korea) and Chōsen oyobi Manchu (Korea and Manchuria), I demonstrate how metropolitan and colonial elites, including imperial and colonial state officials, politicians, intellectuals, physicians and so on, at pains to build Japan’s empire, engaged in the debates on jinkō mondai (population problem) in 1920s and 1930s Korea. The details of the debate bring to light the ways in which the management of the population problem undergirded the complex issues of the peninsula and the empire at large, including emigration, Japanese settlement, the cultivation of Manchuria, the development of mining and heavy chemical industries, the Sino-Japanese War, Western imperial rule, and the emancipation of the coloured populations/races. Further, I delineate how these details were deeply imbedded in the racialized struggle between the Japanese race/coloured races vs. the white race in the global governance of the population and territory in the final phase of Japanese imperial aggression. By going beyond the Western, Anglo-Saxon debates on population, this paper seeks to showcase how East Asian imperial power responded to the white, Western discourse of ‘race suicide vs. the yellow peril’.

Notes on romanization

I have used the McCune–Reischauer and Hepburn romanization systems for Korean and Japanese texts. All translations are mine. Following Korean and Japanese conventions, I have placed last names first, followed by first names.

Notes

1 Korherr also wrote and is known for The Korherr Report (1943), a 16-page report on the development of the Holocaust in Germany and other parts of German-occupied Europe during the Second World War.

2 My current research testifies to this.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by Hankuk University of Foreign Studies Research Fund of 2016.

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