Abstract

This study analyzed the characteristics and changes of textile and clothing distribution from the Japanese colonial period to the 1980s based on oral interviews data in Naju, Damyang, and Hwasun in Jeollanam-do, and concluded as follows. First, the fabric and clothing distribution in the Japanese colonial period continued to produce handcrafted fabrics in each household in Naju, Damyang and Hwasun in Jeollanam-do.,On the 5th day of the local market, there were cotton, hemp, and silk fabrics woven at home in the market, Myeongju, and Hemp. On the 5th, there were mobile merchants who distributed textiles while moving the markets.,It was sold on the market on the 5th during the Japanese colonial period, which was spread by Japan. Second, as modernization policy was promoted after the war, women gradually became unable to produce textiles at home as they changed into a non-farming-oriented living environment.,The market's bejeon continued, but textiles and clothing changed to the form in which factory products were supplied from outside and sold in the market.,A permanent store that handles clothing appears, and factory clothes seem to have gradually replaced women's labor and daily clothes.

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