
Kazuko Kuramoto
Kazuko Kuramoto lives in Ontario, Oregon. She taught Japanese from
1979 until her retirement in 1992, when she returned to college and
earned her degree from Eastern Oregon State University. She m...
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Manchurian Legacy
Memoirs of a Japanese Colonist
Kazuko Kuramoto
2000 ForeWord Magazine Book of the Year, Bronze
Award Kazuko Kuramoto was born and raised in Dairen,
Manchuria, in 1927, at
the peak of Japanese expansionism in Asia. Dairen and the
neighboring
Port Arthur were important colonial outposts on the Liaotung
Peninsula; the train lines established by Russia and taken over by
the Japanese, ended there. When Kuramoto's grandfather arrived in
Dairen as a member of the Japanese police force shortly after the
end
of the Russo-Japanese War in 1905, the family's belief in Japanese
supremacy and its "divine" mission to "save" Asia from Western
imperialists was firmly in place. As a third-generation colonist,
the
seventeen-year-old Kuramoto readily joined the Red Cross Nurse Corps
in 1944 to aid in the war effort and in her country's sacred cause.
A year later, her family listened to the emperor's radio broadcast
". . . we shall have to endure the unendurable, to suffer the
insufferable." Japan surrendered
unconditionally. Manchurian Legacy is the story of
the family's life in Dairen, their survival as a forgotten people
during the battle to reclaim Manchuria waged by Russia, Nationalist
China, and Communist China, and their subsequent repatriation to a
devastated Japan. Kuramoto describes a culture based on the
unthinking oppression of the colonized by the colonizer. And,
because
Manchuria was, in essence, a Japanese frontier, her family lived a
freer and more luxurious life than they would have in Japan—one
relatively unscathed by the war until after the
surrender. As a commentator Kuramoto explores her
culture
both from the inside, subjectively, and from the outside,
objectively. Her memoirs describe her coming of age in a colonial
society, her family's experiences in war-torn Manchuria, and her
"homecoming" to Japan—where she had never been—just as Japan is
engaged in its own cultural upheaval.
Notes, photographs, indexWorld
rightsMSU Press Celebrates Women's
History Month: 25% off this title through April
1, 2009. (The pre-sale list price was $31.95)
210 pp., 6.00" x 9.00", 1999
Cloth, $23.95,
0-87013-510-4 978-0-87013-510-1
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Paperback Edition:
B/W photographs, World rightsMSU Press Celebrates Women's History Month: 25% off this title through April 1, 2009. (The pre-sale list price was $19.95)
210 pp., 6 " x 9 ",
2004 paper, $14.95
0-87013-725-5 978-0-87013-725-9
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