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Common name for Japanese enclaves in cities and towns outside of Japan From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Japantown (日本人街) is a common name for Japanese communities in cities and towns outside Japan. Alternatively, a Japantown may be called J-town, Little Tokyo or Nihonmachi (日本町), the first two being common names for Japantown, San Francisco, Japantown, San Jose and Little Tokyo, Los Angeles.
Japantown | |||||||
Japanese name | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kanji | 日本人街 | ||||||
Kana | にほんじんがい | ||||||
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Historically, Japantowns represented the Japanese diaspora and its individual members known as nikkei (日系), who are Japanese emigrants from Japan and their descendants that reside in a foreign country. Emigration from Japan first happened and was recorded as early as the 12th century to the Philippines,[1] but did not become a mass phenomenon until the Meiji Era, when Japanese began to go to the Philippines,[2] North America, and beginning in 1897 with 35 emigrants to Mexico;[3] and later to Peru, beginning in 1899 with 790 emigrants.[4] There was also significant emigration to the territories of the Empire of Japan during the colonial period; however, most such emigrants repatriated to Japan after the end of World War II in Asia.[5]
For a brief period in the 16th–17th centuries, Japanese overseas activity and presence in Southeast Asia and elsewhere in the region boomed. Sizeable Japanese communities, known as Nihonmachi, could be found in many of the major ports and political centers of the region, where they exerted significant political and economic influence.
The Japanese had been active on the seas and across the region for centuries, traveling for commercial, political, religious and other reasons. The 16th century, however, saw a dramatic increase in such travel and activity. The internal strife of the Sengoku period caused a great many people, primarily samurai, commoner merchants, and Christian refugees to seek their fortunes across the seas. Many of the samurai who fled Japan around this time were those who stood on the losing sides of various major conflicts; some were rōnin, some veterans of the Japanese invasions of Korea or of various other major conflicts. As Toyotomi Hideyoshi and later the Tokugawa shōguns issued repeated bans on Christianity, many fled the country; a significant portion of those settled in Catholic Manila.[6]
In western countries such as Canada and the United States, the Japanese tended to integrate with society so that many if not all Japantowns are in danger of completely disappearing, with the remaining only existing in San Francisco, San Jose, and Los Angeles, California.[7]
The features described below are characteristic of many modern Japantowns.
Many historical Japantowns will exhibit architectural styles that reflect the Japanese culture. Japanese architecture has traditionally been typified by wooden structures, elevated slightly off the ground, with tiled or thatched roofs. Sliding doors (fusuma) were used in place of walls, allowing the internal configuration of a space to be customized for different occasions. People usually sat on cushions or otherwise on the floor, traditionally; chairs and high tables were not widely used until the 20th century. Since the 19th century, however, Japan has incorporated much of Western, modern, and post-modern architecture into construction and design.
Many Japantowns will exhibit the use of the Japanese language in signage existing on road signs and on buildings as Japanese which is the official and primary language of Japan. Japanese has a lexically distinct pitch-accent system. Early Japanese is known largely on the basis of its state in the 8th century, when the three major works of Old Japanese were compiled. The earliest attestation of the Japanese language is in a Chinese document from 252 AD.
Japanese is written with a combination of three scripts: hiragana, derived from the Chinese cursive script, katakana, derived as a shorthand from Chinese characters, and kanji, imported from China. The Latin alphabet, rōmaji, is also often used in modern Japanese, especially for company names and logos, advertising, and when inputting Japanese into a computer. The Hindu–Arabic numerals are generally used for numbers, but traditional Sino–Japanese numerals are also common.
Total population | |
---|---|
About 3,600,000[8] | |
Regions with significant populations | |
Brazil | 1,600,000[9][10][11] |
United States | 1,404,286[12] |
China | 127,282[13]note |
Philippines | 120,000[14][15] |
Canada | 109,740[16] |
Peru | 103,949[17] |
Thailand | 78,431 (2022, Japanese nationality onlynote)[18] |
Australia | 72,000[19] |
Germany | 70,000[20] |
Argentina | 65,000[21][22] |
United Kingdom | 63,011[23] |
South Korea | 58,169[24]note |
Mexico | 35,000[25] |
France | 30,947[13]note |
Singapore | 27,525[26] |
Hong Kong | 27,429[27] |
Vietnam | 17,266 (2017, Japanese nationality onlynote)[28] |
Malaysia | 22,000[29] |
Micronesia | 20,000[30] |
Indonesia | 14,720[31] |
New Zealand | 14,118[32] |
Bolivia | 14,000[33] |
Netherlands | 10,460[34] |
Spain | 8,720[35] |
India | 8,398[36][37] |
New Caledonia | 8,000[38] |
Italy | 7,556[39]note |
Paraguay | 7,000[40] |
Belgium | 6,519 |
Marshall Islands | 6,000[41] |
Sweden | 5,235 |
Palau | 5,000[42] |
Macau | 4,200[43] |
Switzerland | 4,071[13]note |
Austria | 3,500[44] |
Uruguay | 3,456[45]note |
Cambodia | 3,363 (2022, Japanese nationality onlynote)[46] |
Ireland | 3,122[47] |
Colombia | 3,000[48]note |
Chile | 2,600 |
Russia | 1,700[citation needed] |
Pakistan | 1,500[citation needed] |
Qatar | 1,000[49] |
Related ethnic groups | |
Ryukyuan diaspora | |
^ note: The population of naturalized Japanese people and their descendants is unknown. Only the number of the permanent residents with Japanese nationality is shown, except for the United States, where ancestral origin is recorded independent of nationality. |
Japantowns were created because of the widespread immigration of Japanese to America in the Meiji period (1868–1912). At that time, many Japanese were poor and sought economic opportunities in the United States. Japanese immigrants initially settled in Western parts of the US and Canada.
At one time, there were 43 different Japantowns in California,[50] ranging from several square blocks of Little Tokyo in Los Angeles, to one in the small farming community of Marysville in Yuba County. Besides typical businesses, these communities usually had Japanese language schools for the immigrants' children, Japanese language newspapers, Buddhist and Christian churches, and sometimes Japanese hospitals.[51] After the World War II internment of the Japanese, most of those communities declined significantly or disappeared altogether.
There are currently four recognized Japantowns left in the United States, which are facing issues such as commercialization, reconstruction, gentrification and dwindling Japanese populations.[52]
Several Japantowns emerged in the British Columbia's Lower Mainland during the early 20th century, including Japantown, Vancouver.[55] Steveston in Richmond, British Columbia was another community whose population in 1942 was primarily made up of people of Japanese descent.[56] However, these communities were dispersed after Japanese Canadians were interned during World War II.[55][56]
In the early 21st century, a Little Japan has emerged around Bay and Dundas Street in Toronto, Ontario.[57]
Canadian municipalities with Japanese populations higher than the national average (0.3%) include:
Prior to World War II, there were countless Japantowns across the country with over 40 in California alone. The mass evacuation and incarceration of Japanese Americans in the wake of Executive Order 9066 resulted in the loss of tens of thousands of Japanese American properties and businesses, effectively erasing many of the historic Japantowns across the country as their old neighborhoods were quickly occupied by new families who had moved in during their absence and were further obliterated in urban renewal projects of the 1950s and 60s.[58]
Even the surviving Japantowns are a shadow of their former selves as later generations scattered and dispersed across the country as pre-war housing covenants began to be lifted in the 1960s, and now cater more to tourists and the greater Asian Pacific communities.[59]
Designated Japantown areas remain in the following areas:
Northern California: In addition to Japantown districts in San Francisco and San Jose, suburbs and neighborhoods with significant Japanese American populations, histories, and/or previously recognized Japantowns included:[60]
Southern California:
Pacific Islands:
Elsewhere in western U.S.
Eastern U.S.:
In the late 2000s, Malaysia began to become a popular destination for Japanese retirees. Malaysia My Second Home retirement programme received 513 Japanese applicants from 2002 until 2006. Motivations for choosing Malaysia include the low cost of real-estate and of hiring home care workers. Such retirees sometimes refer to themselves ironically as economic migrants or even economic refugees, referring to the fact that they could not afford as high a quality of life in retirement, or indeed to retire at all, were they still living in Japan.
Since the late 1970s-early 1980s many Japanese companies chose Spain to set themselves.
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