A Review of Toshie: A Story of Village Life in Twentieth-Century Japan

838 Words2 Pages

In Toshie: A Story of Village Life in Twentieth-Century Japan, published in 2004, author Simon Partner offers an insight on the transformation that underwent Japan through the mid-twentieth century through the life of Sakaue Toshie, a woman born and raised on a farm in the Kosugi hamlet of Yokogoshi, Niigata—a rural region almost 250km from the capital of Japan. Toshie was born in 1925—a year before the 64-year reign of Showa Era by Emperor Hirohito. This was a time when “two out of every ten babies died in childbirth or infancy,”(1) and Toshie’s family, who were poor tenant farmers renting a mere one acre of land, “were not far above”(2) those that were “literally unable to support themselves.”(2). Kosugi was virtually isolated especially in the winter season, when “residents of Kosugi had their hands full just keeping the main paths open in the hamlet,” (5) but also experienced “frequent floods [that] caused losses that small peasant farmers were often unable to recoup.” (7). This small village of Kosugi was thus one of the many rice-growing villages, with limited productivity and western mechanization. However, during the last three quarters of the twentieth century, Japan essentially transformed from an Empire to a Nation State, changing considerably in not only its governmental structure but also its social and economic structure. This paper examines Simon Partner’s contemporary approach of welding these significant historical transformations with the life experiences of a rural villager—a voice often unheard and hidden under the urban perspectives in historical textbooks. It argues that Japan’s socioeconomic metamorphosis did not occur immediately during or after the World War in the 1940s; rather, these changes kicked in af...

... middle of paper ...

...x understandings that the landowners—the Kofunatos in this case—were of higher standing, and the Sakaues were to comply to the Kofunatos. (112). Thus, the Sakaues returned most of what farmland they had—a mere acre—to the Kofunatos before the land reforms, further compelling Toshie to perform manual labor to maintain a living. Even after the years following the end of the war, these social practices had not changed; Toshie’s father, like many others, firmly believed against risking the relationship between the families by fighting over the land. (112).
It was not until the end of the 1950s that Toshie’s living standards escaped poverty, enabling her to purchase a washing machine and television. During 1955 to 1950, Japan experienced an “extraordinary change in both urban and rural Japan,”(127) where the economy grew so fast that rapid social change was inevitable.

Open Document