Abstract

This extract from Kang Sangjung's autobiography Zainichi (Kōdansha, 2004) describes the experiences of first-generation zainichi Koreans in the city of Kumamoto, as seen from the perspective of a second-generation child growing up in the Japan of the 1950s. Now a professor at the University of Tokyo, Kang Sangjung looks back at the people and places of his childhood, taking these personal memories as a starting point for reflections on identity, ‘homeland’, and the place of zainichi Koreans in Japanese society and in the wider society of Northeast Asia.

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