
Creating Subaltern Counterpublics
Furthermore, the first generation of Korean women migrants were not educated as children, rendering them functionally illiterate and, thus, triply marginalized. Late in life, when family and work responsibilities became less onerous, local authorities created educational opportunities, which the women took up in unexpected numbers, overloading the facilities. The authorities' responses effectively re-marginalized them. The elderly Korean women took a stance and, in the process, reconstituted themselves as social and political actors. This book examines that self-transformation process.
- Undertitel
- Korean Women in Japan and Their Struggle for Night School
- Författare
- Akwi Seo
- ISBN
- 9781925608915
- Språk
- Engelska
- Vikt
- 446 gram
- Utgivningsdatum
- 2017-02-28
- Sidor
- 272