Down and Out in Late Meiji Japan

Paperback: $30.00
ISBN-13: 9780824883133
Published: August 2019
Hardback: $84.00
ISBN-13: 9780824872915
Published: April 2018

Additional Information

362 pages | 24 b&w illustrations

Awards

  • Winner of the Choice Magazine Outstanding Academic Title, 2019
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  • About the Book
  • A sweeping work of original scholarship, Down and Out in Late Meiji Japan examines the daily lives of Japan’s hinmin (poor people), particularly urban slum-dwellers, in the late 1800s and early 1900s. James Huffman draws on newspaper articles, official surveys, and reminiscences to recreate for readers life as experienced by the poor themselves—something not attempted before in scholarship on this era. He begins by explaining the causes behind the fast-increasing numbers of poor neighborhoods in major cities after the late 1880s and goes on to describe in fascinating detail what those neighborhoods looked like and what their inhabitants did for a living: collecting night soil, weaving textiles, making match boxes and other piecework, pulling rickshaws, building the structures that made Japan “modern,” and supplying much of the era’s entertainment, including sex. He also explores what hinmin did outside of work: what they ate, where they did their wash, how they stretched their meager budgets by using pawn brokers, and how they dealt with illness and other disasters and grappled with the painful necessity of sending children to work rather than to school.

    Huffman argues that despite the tremendous challenge of day-to-day living, hinmin confronted life as energetic agents, embracing it as avidly as members of the more affluent classes. Reading sources carefully, and often against the grain, he reveals that many of the poor found meaning in their work, took an active and even influential part in their cities’ politics, and nursed ambitions for a better life. And nearly all took part in the pleasures and festivities that urban neighborhoods offered. Later chapters examine poverty outside the cities and the large-scale emigration of indigent farmers to Hawai‘i’s sugar plantations, beginning in 1885. In his conclusion, Huffman looks at late-Meiji hardship in light of twenty-first-century poverty and the global income disparity that has captured the public’s attention in recent years.

  • About the Author(s)
    • James L. Huffman, Author

      James L. Huffman is H. Orth Hirt Professor of History Emeritus at Wittenberg University in Springfield, Ohio. He lives now in Chicago.
  • Reviews and Endorsements
    • The goal of James Huffman’s powerful study is ‘to understand how it felt to live the life of a hinmin, or poor person’ during Japan’s first phase of industrial growth around the turn of the twentieth century. . . . Using contemporary journalists’ reportage, government reports, literary works, and later analyses by Japanese social scientists, Huffman presents an extraordinarily vivid portrait of the daily lives of these families at the margins of Japanese society.
      —Simon Partner, Duke University, Durham, Pacific Affairs, 93:4, 2020
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