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The Ruralist Paradigm: Social Work Bureaucrats in Colonial Korea and Japan's Assimilationism in the Interwar Period

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 September 2016

Sayaka Chatani*
Affiliation:
FASS Postdoctoral Fellow, National University of Singapore

Abstract

How did the Japanese Empire, while adamantly adhering to assimilationism, manage the politics of colonial difference in the interwar years? How should we situate the seemingly exceptional conduct of Japanese colonial rule from a comparative perspective? To examine these questions, this article analyzes the mindsets of mid-level colonial bureaucrats who specialized in social work. Social work became a major field of political contestation in the post-World War I period around the globe. Policies on social work tested colonial officials regarding their assumptions about state-society relationships and Japan's assimilationist goals. Their debates on social work reveal that by the end of the 1920s colonial officials in Korea had reached a tacit consensus to use a particular analytical lens and ideological goal that I call “ruralism.” In the ruralist paradigm, these officials viewed Korean society as consisting of “rural peasants” and understood Korean social problems as primarily “rural problems.” Ruralism was a product of many overlapping factors, including pressures to integrate colonial society into the imperial system, the empire-wide popularity of agrarian nationalism, global discourses that increasingly dichotomized the “rural” and the “industrial,” and the rivalry between the colonial government and the metropole. How social work officials re-conceptualized the colonial masses and attempted to engage with social problems under the rhetoric of assimilationism showed a similar dynamic to the “developmental colonialism” that prevailed in the French and British empires after World War II.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History 2016 

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References

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10 I chose the term “ruralism” to subtly differentiate it from the widely-known “agrarianism” (nōhonshugi) in Japan. Agrarianism condemned urban culture and linked the agrarian ways of life and morals with national virtue. Although “ruralism” shared agrarian values as an underlying ideology, it was a paradigm within which officials understood the masses as almost all rural peasants.

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18 Ōtomo, Teikoku Nihon, 97–126.

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23 Especially after the March First Movement, a larger number of officials were transferred from the Home Ministry of Japan to the GGK, and their approach to social work understandably resembled what they had learned in their homelands. See Okamoto, Shokuminchi kanryō, 560. They held a less “revolutionary” self-image than did progressive bureaucrats in Manchukuo (1932–1945), whom Louise Young describes. See her Japan's Total Empire: Manchuria and the Culture of Wartime Imperialism (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1998), 291303 Google Scholar.

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25 Between 1935 and 1939, the name of the journal was Dōhōai. In 1940 it returned to Chōsen shakai jigyō, and in 1943 was renamed Chōsen kōsei jigyō.

26 Eisuke, Zenshō, “Chōsen ni okeru hinmin seikatsu,” Chōsen shakai jigyō (Jan. 1929): 25 Google Scholar. See any issue of Chōsen shakai jigyō, Chōsen chihō gyōsei, or Bunkyō no Chōsen to sense the kinds and scopes of their reports. Puja, Kim, Shokuminchiki Chōsen no kyōiku to jendā (Tokyo: Seori shobō, 2005), 369 Google Scholar; Shin, Gi-wook, Peasant Protest and Social Change in Colonial Korea (Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1996), 56 Google Scholar. See also Man-gil, Kang, Ilche sidae pinmin saenghwalsa yǒn'gu (Seoul: Ch'angjaksa, 1987)Google Scholar.

27 Chōsen ni oite shakai kyōkajō hayaku chakushu subeki jigyō, Chōsen no shakai jigyō o kaizen kōjō seshimuru hōsaku,” Chōsen shakai jigyō (July 1928): 28 Google Scholar.

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30 According to Sin (“Kaisetsu,” 15), 63.7 percent of the members of the Korean Social Work Research Group held positions in the Government-General in Korea.

31 Ibid., 27.

32 Kyōka could be translated in different ways, including “moral reform,” “moral education,” and “enlightenment.” See Garon, Sheldon, Molding Japanese Minds: The State in Everyday Life (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1997), 7 Google Scholar.

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38 The backgrounds of some of these figures can be found in colonial government employee records. The highest-ranking official among them, Kamiuchi Hikosaku, was born in Ōita Prefecture in 1890, graduated from the Imperial University of Tokyo in 1916, arrived in Korea in 1919 after working for a mining company in Japan, and had been serving in various offices of the GGK. Okuyama Senzō started his career in the GGK in 1913 and in 1929 published a Korean language textbook for Japanese readers (“Chōsengo taisei”). Satō Yoshiya came to Korea in 1920. Ǒm Ch'ang-sǒp was an elementary schoolteacher in Kyŏnggi Province as of 1921, and was working as the head of the Social Bureau of the Education Department in 1935. For their records, see Kuksa p'yǒngch'ang wiwǒnhoe, Han'guksa Teit'abeisǔ [The Korean history database], db.history.go.kr (accessed 15 Apr. 2015). In the past few decades, Yi Kak-chong has received political attention as one of the major “pro-Japanese” traitors. Born in 1888, Yi studied at Waseda University and began working for the colonial government in 1911. He became one of the powerful promoters of Japan's “imperialization” movement between 1937–1945 and, most famously, wrote the “Oath of the Imperial Subject,” which Korean children and youth were forced to recite at school. Chun-sǒng, Pak, “Yi Kak-chong: Hwangkuk sinminhwa undong e gisu,” in Panminjok munjae yǒn'gusǒ, ed., Ch'inIlp'a 99-in, (Seoul: Tolbegae, 1993), 4450 Google Scholar. Both Ǒm and Yi were among the 3,090 “pro-Japanese traitors” listed by a governmental committee in 2005.

39 “Shakai jigyō zadankai,” 40.

40 Ibid., 35.

41 Okamoto, 491–563. She argues that the GGK's governing system was even more centralized than Japan's, and enjoyed closer connections between the central and local governments. The personnel usually flowed from Japan to Korea, except for a small number of political appointees who went back to Japan after several years. Mid-level bureaucrats normally remained in Korea for decades, as represented by the social work bureaucrats who participated in the 1930 roundtable. The stability in personnel created a basis for a meritocratic system.

42 See Masato, Namiki, “Shokuminchiki Chōsenjin no seiji sanka ni tsuite—Kaihōgoshi tono kanren ni oite,” Chōsenshi kenkyūkai ronbunshū, 81 (Oct. 1993): 40 Google Scholar; Yūko, Hamaguchi, Nihon tōchi to higashi Ajia shakai: Shokuminchiki Chōsen to Manshū no hikaku kenkyū (Tokyo: Keisō Shobō, 1996), 2829 Google Scholar.

43 “Shakai jigyō zadankai,” 25.

44 Ambaras, David R., “Social Knowledge, Cultural Capital, and the New Middle Class in Japan, 1895–1912,” Journal of Japanese Studies 24, 1 (1998): 133 CrossRefGoogle Scholar, 1.

45 See ibid., 1–9; Garon, Sheldon, “From Meiji to Heisei: The State and Civil Society in Japan,” in Schwarts, Frank and Pharr, Susan, eds., The State of Civil Society in Japan (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003), 4650 Google Scholar.

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47 For example, Yi Kwang-su and Yun Ch'i-ho. Both promoted the integration of Korea into the Japanese Empire and were later labeled “pro-Japanese” collaborators, especially for their support of Japan's war effort.

48 “Shakai jigyō zadankai,” 34.

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50 See Moon, Yumi, Populist Collaborators: The Ilchinhoe and the Japanese Colonization of Korea, 1896–1910 (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2013)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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57 Ōtomo shows that the populations of Seoul, Incheon, and Kaesong increased by thirty thousand people between 1932 and 1934, a figure five times greater than the natural increase of the population (Teikoku Nihon, 237). Of those domestic immigrants to the cities, 65 percent explained that they moved “owing to the poverty.” Also see Eisuke, Zenshō, “Chōsen ni okeru hinmin seikatsu,” Chōsen shakai jigyō (Jan. 1929): 25 Google Scholar.

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64 Most famously, Zenshō Eisuke, GGK's leading researcher of Korean affairs, compiled massive volumes on various rural associations (kye), hamlet organizations, social customs, and clan-based communities, as well as on the Korean economy and industry in the 1920s. His research results include Chōsen no kei (1926); Chōsen no jinkō genshō (1927); Chōsen no saigai (1928); Chōsen no hanzai to kankyō (1928); Chōsen no sei (1934); and three massive volumes of Chōsen no shūraku (1933–1935), all published as research material (chōsa shiryō) by Chōsen sōtokufu. His still serve as the most comprehensive studies of prewar Korean villages.

65 See Shin, Gi-Wook, “Agrarianism: A Critique of Colonial Modernity in Korea,” Comparative Studies in Society and History 41, 4 (1999): 784804 CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Clark Sorensen puts it this way: “Among some intellectuals the Korean nation came to be identified primarily with the nongmin. The nongmin, in turn, came to be conceived in a distinctive way as inside history, because of their significance in schemes of evolutionary development, but as outside history, because of their significance of preserving an essentialized Korean ethnic identity.” National Identity and the Construction of the Category ‘Peasant’ in Colonial Korea,” in Robinson, Michael and Shin, Gi-Wook, ed., Colonial Modernity in Korea (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1999), 299300 Google Scholar.

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72 Various scholars have discussed Japanese agrarianism in more detail. See, for example, Havens, Thomas, Farm and Nation in Modern Japan: Agrarian Nationalism 1870–1940 (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1974)Google Scholar; Vlastos, Stephen, “Agrarianism without Tradition: The Radical Critique of Prewar Japanese Modernity,” in Vlastos, Stephen, ed., Mirror of Modernity: Invented Traditions of Modern Japan (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1998), 7494 Google Scholar; Gluck, Carol, Japan's Modern Myths: Ideology in the Late Meiji Period (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1985), 178204 Google Scholar; and Smith, Kerry, A Time of Crisis: Japan, the Great Depression, and Rural Revitalization (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2001), 94113 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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84 Ibid., 23.

85 Ibid., 114. The contemporary academic authority on film education, Umino Yukinori, in his studies emphasized the harmfulness of film rather than its benefits. See Kenji, Iwamoto, “Gentō kara eiga e: Meiji, Taishō-ki ni okeru shakai kyōka to minshū gorakuron,” Waseda daigaku daigakuin bungaku kenkyūka kiyō 3, 45 (1999): 82 Google Scholar.

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95 During this period the use of documentary films became common in other empires. They were a popular tool to “make the fiction of the empire a reality” in the French Empire. Levine, Alison J. Murray, Framing the Nation: Documentary Film in Interwar France (New York: Continuum, 2010), 5688 Google Scholar. The British also used documentaries for public health education in Africa. Burns, James, “Watching Africans Watch Films: Theories of Spectatorship in British Colonial Africa,” Historical Journal of Film, Radio, and Television 20, 2 (2000): 197211 CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Diawara, Manthia, “Sub-Saharan African Film Production: Technological Paternalism,” Jump Cut 32 (Apr. 1987): 6165 Google Scholar.

96 Pok Hwan-mok, “Chōsen sōtokufu no shokuminchi tōchi ni okeru eiga riyō” (PhD diss., Waseda University, 2005), 132–34.

97 Some of these had English subtitles; ibid., 123.

98 Sennō, Okuyama, “Katsudō shashin ni kansuru ichi kōsatsu: kyōka shakai no tachiba yori mitaru,” Chōsen shakai jigyō (Aug. 1931): 39 Google Scholar.

99 Ibid., 38.

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101 “Eiga kyakuhon boshū.”

102 Tōru, Ikeda, “Dakuryū o norikiru,” Chōsen shakai jigyō (Nov. 1931): 63107 Google Scholar.

103 The Association had 1,838 members in 1930, but they were concentrated in Kyǒnggi-do, Kangwon-do, and North Kyǒngsang-do, with few residing in the other provinces. Sin, “Kaisetsu,” 27.

104 Gamble, “Peasants of the Empire.”

105 Levine, Framing the Nation, 88.

106 Gamble, “Peasants of the Empire.”