Ah Ku and Karayuki-san
Title | Ah Ku and Karayuki-san PDF eBook |
Author | James Francis Warren |
Publisher | NUS Press |
Pages | 482 |
Release | 2003 |
Genre | Prostitution |
ISBN | 9789971692674 |
Among the groups of workers whose labour built Singapore in the 20th century were women who travelled from China and Japan to work in Singapore as prostitutes. This study explores the trade in women and children in Asia, and looks at the daily lives of prostitutes in the colonial city.
Selling Sex in the City: A Global History of Prostitution, 1600s-2000s
Title | Selling Sex in the City: A Global History of Prostitution, 1600s-2000s PDF eBook |
Author | |
Publisher | BRILL |
Pages | 909 |
Release | 2017-08-28 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 9004346252 |
Selling Sex in the City offers a worldwide analysis of prostitution since 1600. It analyses more than 20 cities with an important sex industry and compares policies and social trends, coercion and agency, but also prostitutes' working and living conditions.
Selling Women
Title | Selling Women PDF eBook |
Author | Amy Stanley |
Publisher | Univ of California Press |
Pages | 281 |
Release | 2012-06-19 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 0520270908 |
“At last, a study that goes far beyond the urban-centered discourse with which we are already familiar to place the trafficking of women in a solid historical and comparative context. Through a carefully reasoned and balanced analysis of diverse sources, Stanley shows how prostitution practices varied. This book will set the standard for studies of prostitution in early modern Japan for decades to come.” -Anne Walthall, University of California, Irvine “Selling Women is a remarkable achievement. With her gaze fixed firmly on the young women whose labor sustained prostitution as an industry, Amy Stanley traces shifts in the moral economy of the sex trade over the course of the Tokugawa era, and unveils the ironic consequences of economic growth and social change. This meticulously researched, wonderfully written book is a major contribution to the literature on gender and society in Japan.” -David L. Howell, Harvard University
The Sulu Zone, 1768-1898
Title | The Sulu Zone, 1768-1898 PDF eBook |
Author | James Francis Warren |
Publisher | NUS Press |
Pages | 452 |
Release | 2007 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 9789971693862 |
"First published in 1981, ""The Sulu Zone"" has become a classic in the field of Southeast Asian History. The book deals with a fascinating geographical, cultural and historical ""border zone"" centred on the Sulu and Celebes Seas between 1768 and 1898, and its complex interactions with China and the West. The author examines the social and cultural forces generated within the Sulu Sultanate by the China trade, namely the advent of organized, long distance maritime slave raiding and the assimilation of captives on a hitherto unprecedented scale into a traditional Malayo-Muslim social system. How entangled commodities, trajectories of tastes, and patterns of consumption and desire that span continents linked to slavery and slave raiding, the manipulation of diverse ethnic groups, the meaning and constitution of ""culture, "" and state formation? James Warren responds to this question by reconstructing the social, economic, and political relationships of diverse peoples in a multi-ethnic zone of which the Sulu Sultanate was the centre, and by problematizing important categories like ""piracy"", ""slavery"", ""culture"", ""ethnicity"", and the ""state"". His work analyzes the dynamics of the last autonomous Malayo-Muslim maritime state over a long historical period and describes its stunning response to the world capitalist economy and the rapid ""forward movement"" of colonialism and modernity. It also shows how the changing world of global cultural flows and economic interactions caused by cross-cultural trade and European dominance affected men and women who were forest dwellers, highlanders, and slaves, people who worked in everyday jobs as fishers, raiders, divers or traders. Often neglected by historians, the response of these members of society are a crucial part of the history of Southeast Asia."--
Planting Empire, Cultivating Subjects
Title | Planting Empire, Cultivating Subjects PDF eBook |
Author | Lynn Hollen Lees |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Pages | 379 |
Release | 2017-12-21 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 1107038405 |
This is an innovative study of how British Colonial rule and society in Malayan towns and plantations transformed immigrants into British subjects.
Japan's Imperial Underworlds
Title | Japan's Imperial Underworlds PDF eBook |
Author | David R. Ambaras |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Pages | 301 |
Release | 2018-08-09 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 1108470114 |
Explores Sino-Japanese relations through encounters that took place between each country's people living at the margins of empire.
Slaving Zones
Title | Slaving Zones PDF eBook |
Author | Jeff Fynn-Paul |
Publisher | BRILL |
Pages | 380 |
Release | 2018-01-03 |
Genre | Political Science |
ISBN | 9004356487 |
Listen to podcast on “Slaving Zones, Contemporary Slavery and Citizenship: Reflections from the Brazilian Case”. In Slaving Zones: Cultural Identities, Ideologies, and Institutions in the Evolution of Global Slavery, fourteen authors—including both world-leading and emerging historians of slavery—engage with the ‘Slaving Zones’ theory. This theory has recently taken the field of Mediterranean slavery studies by storm, and the challenge posed by the editors was to see if the ‘Slaving Zones’ theory could be applied in the wider context of long-term global history. The results of this experiment are promising. In the Introduction, Jeff Fynn-Paul points out over a dozen ways in which the contributors have added to the concept of ‘Slaving Zones’, helping to make it one of the more dynamic theories of global slavery since the advent of Orlando Patterson’s Slavery and Social Death.