Episode 374 – The First Frontier, Part 5

This week, we’re wrapping up our history of the colonization of Hokkaido with a look at the impact of the American occupation on the island, as well as some final thoughts on the modern history of the Ainu and their political organizing.

Sources

Larson, Erik, et al. “Emerging Indigenous Governance: Ainu Rights at the Intersection of Global Norms and Domestic Institutions.” Alternatives: Global, Local, and Political 33, No 1. (Jan-March, 2008)

Saunavaara, Juha. “Reconstructing and Redefining Hokkaido During the Postwar Period.” International Journal of Asia Pacific Studies 14, No 1 (January, 2018)

Saunavaara, Juha. “Postwar Development of Hokkaido: The US Occupation Authorities’ Local Government Reform in Japan.” Journal of American-East Asian Relations 21, No 2 (2014).

Images

Tanaka Toshibumi during the 1950s.
Protests in 2019 against the new Ainu laws. Despite some improvements, the relationship between the Ainu and the central government remains contentious.
Camp Crawford, the American base in Sapporo, in 1951.
The red line here shows the proposed Soviet division of Hokkaido; everything north of the line would have been in the Soviet zone of occupation. However, the Americans refused the Soviet suggestion.

 

2 thoughts on “Episode 374 – The First Frontier, Part 5”

  1. I’m sure that you probably touched on this in your show in the Olympics but how big of a deal was it to people on the 1972 Winter Games came to Sapporo? Not even 100 years before, the island and city were a backwater, and now it was hosting a major international event.

    Has the island embraced winter tourism, either by domestic or international travelers?

  2. It sounds like Hokkaido is the equivalent to Alaska. Indigenous people, that pioneer spirit, low development, a wild frontier. Would you agree?

Comments are closed.