1 Shaping Family Identity among Korean Migrant Potters in Japan during the Tokugawa Period

Susan Broomhall
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Abstract

This chapter considers the management of family through analysis of manufacturing and cultural traditions among Koreans relocated to Japan during the Japanese invasions of the Korean peninsula during the period of the Imjin Wars (1592–98). In particular, it examines the monument created by Jissen, a fourth-generation son of the Fukaumi family who had come to Japan to work in ceramics during the period of the invasions. Potters were particularly desirable labourers during this period and Korean family-run operations were critical to the development of Japanese porcelain manufacture. By the beginning of the eighteenth century, when Jissen raised the temple monument to his great-grandparents, changing tea ceremony practices had brought Aritaware increased attention from the Japanese nobility, and then from a wider European clientele. This chapter analyses how his monument helped construct the identity of a translocated family, and gave meaning to dynasty, house and household in Tokugawa Japan.
1德川时期旅日朝鲜陶工家庭身份的塑造
本章通过分析壬辰倭乱时期移居日本的韩国人的生产和文化传统,讨论了家族经营问题。特别要介绍的是福井家族的第四代儿子Jissen制作的纪念碑,他在侵略时期来到日本从事陶瓷工作。在这一时期,陶工是特别受欢迎的劳工,韩国的家庭经营对日本瓷器制造业的发展至关重要。到18世纪初,当Jissen为他的曾祖父母立起寺庙纪念碑时,茶道习俗的改变使Aritaware越来越受到日本贵族的关注,随后又受到了更广泛的欧洲客户的关注。本章分析他的纪念碑如何帮助建立一个迁移家庭的身份,并赋予德川王朝、房屋和家庭以意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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