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Exposing Imperial Japan

Exposing Imperial Japan

Viewing the suffering of colonized people through the lens of the colonizer's propaganda

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Optimistic news coverage of Syngman Rhee meeting...
Imperial Japanese PSA ordering residents to avoid...
1943 editorial calls for Korean language to...
When all of Korea was forced to...
In 1942, one pro-Imperial Japan Korean family...
Spotlight on 1943 Seoul: A Glimpse into...
Governor Koiso likened Korea to a disabled...
Elderly Korean farmer Kim Chi-gu (김치구, 金致龜),...
Korean kindergartners holding rising sun flags shouting...
This 1942 stuttering correction seminar for Korean...
Colonial authorities abruptly abolished Korean translations of...
Koreans faced up to 10 years in...
Imperial Japan called Seoul residents the laziest...
Severe 1940s wartime housing crisis in urban...
Colonial authorities discussed how to reduce prenatal/infant...

Month: August 2023

Daily Life

Imperial Japanese colonial regime instilled intense fear and paranoia among Koreans by forcing them to listen to this 20-minute radio broadcast mobilizing the entire nation in counter-espionage to snitch on each other even for complaining about food shortages (July 1943)

2023-08-07

613

2763

It’s been just over 80 years since a terrifying radio broadcast was delivered to the entirety of the Korean nation

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Recent Posts

  • Imperial Japanese and Korean collaborator elite partied in brothels and luxury restaurants while ordinary Koreans starved in wartime Seoul, early 1945
  • The film that tried to make Koreans see Imperial Japan as their “Omoni” (Mother): Inside the 1945 propaganda movie “Love and Vows” (愛と誓ひ, 사랑과맹세)
  • In 1945, Imperial Japan trained almost every able-bodied Korean man, woman, and child to stab Americans to death with bamboo spears in suicide combat militias under direct Imperial Army command
  • Imperial Japan banned passengers wearing chima skirts from boarding trains, escalating its campaign against traditional Korean garments in May 1945
  • “If Japan loses, Koreans will fight each other, divided by foreign powers”: June 1945 warning by Korean collaborator (박춘금, 朴春琴) who urged authorities to redirect Korean nationalism into support for Imperial Japan

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    • Imperial Japanese penal official said Korean 'ideological criminals' (independence activists) were 'not well made as human beings', but 'if only their thoughts could be corrected, then they will get better' so they can be 'used' for wartime labor, but 'this is not the case with ordinary criminals'
    • Nostalgia for Imperial Japan and its undercurrents in Kishi Nobusuke's legacy in postwar Japan, in Park Chung-hee and Chun Doo-hwan's legacy in South Korea, and why access to wartime newspapers of Japan-occupied Korea is important to combat historical misinformation by the far-right in both countries
    • Simon Young Kim (김영근), a South Korean violin virtuoso and disciple of famous violinist Jascha Heifetz, Simon was once my teacher and mentor, and his son was my best friend in elementary school
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