Through colonial lens : karayuki-san in prewar Singapore

In 1870, the first group of karayuki-san arrived in Singapore. Although much has been written on the social history of these female Japanese prostitutes, little is known of the colonial attitudes towards them. The karayuki-san were diligently clean and professional in providing services to men in Si...

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Main Author: Tay, Zi Han
Other Authors: Tapsi Mathur
Format: Final Year Project (FYP)
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/137461
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author Tay, Zi Han
author2 Tapsi Mathur
author_facet Tapsi Mathur
Tay, Zi Han
author_sort Tay, Zi Han
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description In 1870, the first group of karayuki-san arrived in Singapore. Although much has been written on the social history of these female Japanese prostitutes, little is known of the colonial attitudes towards them. The karayuki-san were diligently clean and professional in providing services to men in Singapore. However, the removal of European brothels in 1916 resulted in a drastic change in attitudes towards the karayuki-san, whereby the colonial officials no longer held the same amount of respect towards them as before. The problem of racial typing was further accentuated in the measures taken by the colonial government, such as tackling the possible threat of fervent Japanese shipping competition to British trade in Southeast Asia and resolving the issue of “unordered” space. To understand the change in attitudes towards the karayuki-san, this thesis argues how the demarcation of racial lines emphasised the colonial reconstruction of pathological ideas, as the idea of sanitation was ingrained in colonial mindsets in efforts to “modernise” their colonies.
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spelling ntu-10356/1374612022-07-14T06:16:31Z Through colonial lens : karayuki-san in prewar Singapore Tay, Zi Han Tapsi Mathur School of Humanities tapsi.mathur@ntu.edu.sg Humanities::History::Asia In 1870, the first group of karayuki-san arrived in Singapore. Although much has been written on the social history of these female Japanese prostitutes, little is known of the colonial attitudes towards them. The karayuki-san were diligently clean and professional in providing services to men in Singapore. However, the removal of European brothels in 1916 resulted in a drastic change in attitudes towards the karayuki-san, whereby the colonial officials no longer held the same amount of respect towards them as before. The problem of racial typing was further accentuated in the measures taken by the colonial government, such as tackling the possible threat of fervent Japanese shipping competition to British trade in Southeast Asia and resolving the issue of “unordered” space. To understand the change in attitudes towards the karayuki-san, this thesis argues how the demarcation of racial lines emphasised the colonial reconstruction of pathological ideas, as the idea of sanitation was ingrained in colonial mindsets in efforts to “modernise” their colonies. Bachelor of Arts in History 2020-03-27T01:17:37Z 2020-03-27T01:17:37Z 2020 Final Year Project (FYP) https://hdl.handle.net/10356/137461 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
spellingShingle Humanities::History::Asia
Tay, Zi Han
Through colonial lens : karayuki-san in prewar Singapore
title Through colonial lens : karayuki-san in prewar Singapore
title_full Through colonial lens : karayuki-san in prewar Singapore
title_fullStr Through colonial lens : karayuki-san in prewar Singapore
title_full_unstemmed Through colonial lens : karayuki-san in prewar Singapore
title_short Through colonial lens : karayuki-san in prewar Singapore
title_sort through colonial lens karayuki san in prewar singapore
topic Humanities::History::Asia
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/137461
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