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Ditemukan 4945 dokumen yang sesuai dengan query
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Kim, Janice C.H.
"Locating Korean factory women in time and place -- Modernization and the rise of women?s wage work -- Lives and labors inside the factories -- Contests of power and workers? modes of association -- The Pacific war and the life courses of working women -- Conclusions : the legacies of colonial working wome"
Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 2009
331.480 95 KIM l
Buku Teks SO  Universitas Indonesia Library
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Akita, George
"This book examines Japan's policies in Korea from 1910 to 1945. A nuanced view of japan's rule in Korea is achieved by juxtaposing it to the European's record in Asia and Africa. It also highlights various ways that Japan's colonial interlude contributed to South Korea's postwar industrialisation."
Portland: Maine MerwinAsia, 2015
951.903 AKI j
Buku Teks SO  Universitas Indonesia Library
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Ridwan Suseno
"Skripsi ini membahas perkembangan pertanian dan industri, serta kondisi sosial di Korea pada masa penjajahan Jepang tahun 1910-1945. Dengan menggunakan metode penelitian kualitatif deksriptif yang digunakan untuk menganalisa data sekunder, dapat disimpulkan bahwa pertanian di Korea berkembang pesat pada awal masa penjajahan hingga tahun 1930-an, sedangkan industri di Korea baru mulai dikembangkan sejak tahun 1930-an hingga 1945. Pengembangan di bidang industri yang dimulai sejak tahun 1930-an memunculkan dampak sosial berupa pergantian mata pencaharian sebagian masyarakat Korea yang semula petani menjadi buruh dan pekerja pabrik. Akan tetapi, sangat disayangkan pertambahan jumlah buruh dan pekerja pabrik di Korea tidak diiringi dengan bekal pendidikan dan keterampilan yang memadai sehingga upah yang mereka dapatkan pun relatif rendah.

This thesis discusses about Korean agriculture and industry development during Japanese imperialism 1910-1945. This thesis also discusses about Korean social condition in relation with the development of agriculture and industry. Through descriptive qualitative research used to analyse secondary data, this research shows that Korean agriculture development was started in early Japanese imperialism until 1930’s, meanwhile Korean industry development was started in 1930’s until 1945. The social condition shows that since industry had been developed since 1930's, the number of Korean farmers went down but Korean labors rised significantly. Unfortunately, they did not have enough academic qualification so that their monthly payment was relative low.
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Depok: Fakultas Ilmu Pengetahuan Budaya Universitas Indonesia, 2014
S56231
UI - Skripsi Membership  Universitas Indonesia Library
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Nayoung, Aimee Kwon
"Synopsis:
"Intimate Empire is a pioneering study of the Japanese (and Korean) language cultural productions by ethnic Koreans from the empire's expansionist era during the Asia-Pacific war. Nayoung Aimee Kwon's intervention enables us to rethink the spaces of complex resistance, vexed co-optation and accommodating governmentalities opened up by these texts that trouble the received notions of ethnonational boundaries between postcolonial Korea and postimperial Japan. Staking out thought-provoking problematics and excavating new materials, analyzed by Kwon with exceptional care, nuance, and theoretical sophistication, Intimate Empire is a major step forward in transnational Asian studies." -- Jin-kyung Lee, author of Service Economies: Militarism, Sex Work, and Migrant Labor in South Korea "Nayoung Aimee Kwon's Intimate Empire is a breakthrough in Korean and Japanese Studies. The book has a dual focus: one is the contested colonial encounter between Korean and Japanese intellectuals in the Japanese Empire; the other is postcolonial power in which minority intellectuals work in the United States. Clearly it is an innovative type of comparative study of imperialisms both past and present." -- Naoki Sakai, author of Translation and Subjectivity: On 'Japan' and Cultural Nationalism "Impressively researched and brilliantly crafted, this is a landmark study of cultural production under Japanese colonialism that is sure to create many big waves across Korean and Japanese studies and which should be read by everyone with an interest in the antinomies and conundrums of colonial modernity throughout the world. Eschewing the conventional nationalist binary of 'collaboration' versus 'resistance,' Nayoung Aimee Kwon introduces the third term of 'intimacy,' and shows that an effective postcolonial critique must interrogate this disavowed and unspeakable zone." -- Takashi Fujitani, author of Race for Empire: Koreans as Japanese and Japanese as Americans during World War II "Besides many compelling analyses and arguments made in Intimate Empire, plentiful visual materials provide us a fascinating glimpse into the cultural fields in the empire... it is a great contribution to the scholarship on colonial culture and imperialism for its exemplary handling of archives and its succinct arguments made based on comparative readings of texts. It is an essential text for researchers of colonial literature, transcultural colonial exchange, cultural fields in wartime Japan, and translation." -- Jooyeon Rhee Acta Koreana "Intimate Empire is a most welcome addition to transcultural scholarship on East Asian literatures and cultures and sets an excellent example for future research on imperialism in East Asia and well beyond." -- Karen Thornber Pacific Affairs "Intimate Empire establishes critical questions for historians to ponder, beginning with: Who writes the empire? How does the language they use matter? Kwon has demonstrated many pathways into, as well as offered new and alternate routes for, future discovery." -- Alexis Dudden American Historical Revie"
Durham: Duke University Press, 2015
895.609 NAY i
Buku Teks SO  Universitas Indonesia Library
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Seoul: Ewha Womens University Press, 1986
305.4 CHA
Buku Teks SO  Universitas Indonesia Library
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"In the early decades of the twentieth century in colonial Indonesia, one witnessed the proliferation of novels in which women were thematized as the femme fatale. These novels were written largely by male novelists as cautionary tales for girls who had a European-style school education and therefore were perceived to be predisposed to violating customary gender norms in the pursuit of personal autonomy. While such masculinist responses to women and material progress have been well studied, women’s views of the social transformation conditioned by modernization and secular education are still insufficiently understood. This essay responds to this scantiness with a survey of texts written by Chinese women novelists who emerged during the third and fourth decades of the twentieth century, drawing attention in particular to the ways in which these texts differed from those written by their male predecessors. More important, this essay highlights the works by one particular woman novelist, Dahlia, who wrote with an exceptionally distinct female voice and woman-centered viewpoint."
SEA 4:3 (2015)
Artikel Jurnal  Universitas Indonesia Library
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"This paper aims to examine the influence of the minganhak on the formation of knowledge culture in colonial Korea...."
Artikel Jurnal  Universitas Indonesia Library
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