1st Edition

Japanese Colonialism In Taiwan Land Tenure, Development, And Dependency, 1895-1945

By Chih-ming Ka Copyright 1995
    252 Pages
    by Routledge

    255 Pages
    by Routledge

    Exploring the dynamics of development and dependency, this book traces the experience of Taiwan under Japanese colonial rule. Chih-ming Ka shows how, unlike in other sugar-producing colonies, Taiwan was able to sustain its indigenous family farms and small-scale rice millers, who not only survived but thrived in competition with Japanese sugar capital. Focusing on Taiwan's success, the author reassesses theories of capitalist transformation of colonial agriculture and reconceptualizes the relationship between colonial and indigenous socioeconomic and political forces. Considering the influence of sugar on the evolution of family farms and the contradictory relationship between sugar and rice production, he explores the interplay of class forces to explain the unique experience of colonial Taiwan.

    Foreword -- Introduction -- Land Tenure, Class Relations, and the State in Precolonial Taiwan (1683–1895) -- The Colonial State, Foreign Capital, and the Articulation of Indigenous Agriculture -- Family Farms and the Formation of Surplus Extraction Mechanisms by Sugar Capital -- The Contradictory Relationship Between Rice and Sugar -- Conclusion -- Appendix: Prices, Income, and Land Productivity in Rice, Cane and Sugar Production, 1910–1938 -- Conversion of Weights and Measures

    Biography

    Chih-ming Ka