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Exposing Imperial Japan

Imperial Japanese newspapers transcribed and translated into English

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Governor Koiso told Korean conscripts in Imperial...
In 1943, Japanese company bosses discussed how...
Colonial authorities abruptly abolished Korean translations of...
Koreans generally used to make their own...
Imperial Japan called Seoul residents the laziest...
In Japan-occupied Korea, Koreans often spoke Japanese...
Despite Pastor Underwood’s heroic refusal to worship...
Onerous regulations prescribing long lists of permissible...
President Franklin D. Roosevelt and Prime Minister...
Master Imaizumi Teisuke, the spiritual leader of...
A Japanese author took a Busan-Seoul train...
‘We’re going to Washington!’ – a 1944...
1943 Editorial: nature is an object of...
Book review of Anti-Japan Tribalism (반일종족주의, 反日種族主義),...
By April 1944, there were 13 internment...

Tag: 1917

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In 1917, an 11-year-old Korean girl in Gyeongbuk made the news for managing to enroll in a school for Japanese settlers

2021-11-22

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  August 11, 1917 Gyeongseong Ilbo (Keijo Nippo) An Admirable Young Korean Girl Eleven-year-old Sin Hoja is a daughter of

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Recent Posts

  • August 28, 1945: Colonial regime announces a peaceful transition of power to the new incoming Korean government, reopens comfort women services, department stores, cafés in Seoul as popular uprising subsides, plans orderly repatriation of Japanese residents
  • Koreans first read of the US/Soviet Division of Korea on Aug. 25th, 1945 in this historic Keijo Nippo news article explicitly announcing for the first time that ‘Korea is to be made free and independent’
  • Imperial Japanese Army finally acknowledges Korea’s imminent independence just over a week after liberation (Aug. 23, 1945) with a jumbled announcement full of desperate denials, threats, and unconvincing reassurances to fend off Korean armed resistance
  • A mere 3 days after surrender, liberated Koreans were already attempting to overthrow the colonial regime in Korea, alarming the Imperial Japanese Army who made this radio broadcast on August 18, 1945 to threaten military action against ‘individuals harboring evil thoughts’
  • Annie Ellers Bunker, American missionary who went from personal physician to Empress Myeongseong to thriving philanthropist in Colonial Korea, was praised in this 1938 Keijo Nippo obituary for endorsing the Imperial Japanese Army

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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

    Exposing Imperial Japan

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