Abstract
As Tessa Morris-Suzuki points out, ‘the lines that are drawn on the map determine which paths of movement are possible and which impossible, which journeys are legal and which illegal’.1 The Russo-Japanese War of 1904–5 and World War II of 1939–45 twice moved the line of the Russo (Soviet)-Japanese national border on Sakhalin Island. The last re-drawing of the national border trapped nearly 24,000 descendants from the Korean Peninsula,2 who had been brought to the island just before and during the Asia-Pacific War. These Koreans were not repatriated to their homeland at the end of the war, unlike many thousands of others who were in Japan and other parts of the former Japanese Empire, due to a complex combination of factors.3
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Notes
T Morris-Suzuki, Borderline Japan: Foreigners and Frontier Controls in the Postwar Era (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010), pp. 32–3.
M Caprio and Yu Jia, ‘Occupations of Korea and Japan and the Origins of the Korean Diaspora in Japan’, in S Ryang and J Lie (eds), Diaspora without Homeland: Being Korean in Japan (Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 2009), pp. 28–9.
Exceptions include JJ Stephan, Sakhalin: A History (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1971,
and Sugiura Kohei and Suzuki Isshi, Chōsenjin kyōsei renkō kyōsei rōdō-no kiroku–Hokkaidō, Chishima, Karafuto hen [Records of Korean forced migration and forced labor] (Gendaishi Shuppankai: Chosenjin kyosei renkou shinso-chosadan, 1974).
For example, see: Kashiwazaki Chikako, ‘The Politics of Legal Status: The equation of nationality with ethnonational identity’, 13–31; S Ryang, Sonia, ‘Introduction: Resident Koreans in Japan’, 1–12; and Ryang, ‘The North Korean Homeland of Koreans in Japan’, 32–54, all in S Ryang (ed.), Koreans in Japan: Critical Voices from the Margin (London and New York: Routledge, 2000).
T Morris-Suzuki, ‘Northern Lights: The Making and Unmaking of Karafuto Identity’, The Journal of Asian Studies 60, No. 3 (2001): 646.
IA Senchenko, Sakhalin i Kurily–istoriia osvoeniia i razvitiia [Sakhalin and the Kuriles–A history of the exploration and development] (Moscow: Moia Rossia, 2006), pp. 360–1.
See, for example, PH Kratoska (ed.), Asian Labor in the Wartime Japanese Empire: Unknown Histories (New York and London: ME Sharp, 2005).
Bok Zi Kou, Sakhalinskie koreitsy: problemy i perspektivy [Sakhalin Koreans: Problems and perspectives] (Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk: Sakhalinskoe Oblastnoe Knizhnoe Izdatelstvo, 1989), pp. 18–20; Kuzin, Dalnevostochnyekoreitsy , pp. 198–9.
Kuzin, Dalnevostochnye koreitsy , p. 229; AT Kuzin, Sakhalinskie koreitsy: istoriia i sovremennost’ (Sbornik dokumentov, 1880–2005) [Sakhalin Koreans: History and current state, 1880–2005] (Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk: Sakhalinskoe Oblastnoe Knizhnoe Izdatelstvo, 2006), p. 94;
AE Ostashev, ‘Sakhalinskii ugol’; Sugiura and Suzuki, Chōsenjin kyōsei renkō kyōsei rōdō-no kiroku , pp. 371–432.
Utsumi Aiko, ‘Japan’s Korean Soldiers in the Pacific War’, in PH Kratoska (ed.), Asian Labor in the Wartime Japanese Empire: Unknown Histories (New York and London: ME Sharp, 2005), p. 83.
S Hall, ‘The Question of Cultural Identity’, in S Hall, D Held and T McGrew (eds), Modernity and Its Futures (Cambridge and Oxford: Polity, 1992), pp. 276–7.
Ulbe Bosma, Jan Lucassen and Gert Oostindie, ‘Introduction. Postcolonial Migrations and Identity Politics: Towards a Comparative Perspective’, in U Bosma, J Lucassen and G Oostindie (eds), Postcolonial Migrants and Identity Politics: Europe, Russia, Japan and the United States in Comparison (New York and Oxford: Berghahn (Books, 2012), p. 9.
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© 2015 Igor R. Saveliev
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Saveliev, I.R. (2015). Trapped in the Contested Borderland: Sakhalin Koreans, Wartime Displacement and Identity. In: de Matos, C., Caprio, M.E. (eds) Japan as the Occupier and the Occupied. Palgrave Macmillan, London. https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137408112_9
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137408112_9
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