This history describes and analyses brothel prostitution in Singapore between 1870 and 1940. The vital role of Chinese and Japanese prostitutes in sustaining Singapore's pre-war economy and society has not been fully recognized. Starting with village backgrounds in rural China and Japan, and the hazards of the trade in women and children, the author follows the prostitutes through their encounters with brothel life in general, and in particular explores their routines and crises of earning, spending, social relations, leisure, mobility, disease, and death. A rare portrait of the daily lives of the ah ku and karayuki-san emerges. It is also a historical account of human nature, of human relationships compelled by the pride and prejudice of the human spirit. The author has used Coroners Inquests and Inquiries, statistical and other records, as well as photographs and oral reminiscences to resurrect the lives of the ah ku and karayuki-san. By organizing the case material around themes relating to the workplace and working conditions, the author has converted a mass of depositions into an 'inner history', evoking a milieu and sentiment whose details were often clouded by an atmosphere of unease, irony, and danger: of Loh Sai Soh's fatal objection to Lam Loh Suh leaving the brothel: of Otoyo and her penalized client of two years, Lance-Corporal Albert Chacksfield; of the beautiful Duya Hadachi, her experiences of a relationship strained beyond endurance, and the deadly struggle between her paramours; and many, many others. Such ordinary people tumble from the pages of the records: they talk about choice of partners, love and betrayal, desperation and alienation, drawing us into their lives.These short vignettes turn out to have remarkable implications for the pace and texture of Ah Ku and Karayuki-san, and for stitching together a tapestry of poverty, sexual antagonisms, subordination, and conflict in the social history of prostitutes' and coolies' experiences. Combining a life-span approach with collective biography, the author has created a personal history of the ah ku and karayuki-san's times closely based on intimate experience, while still paying careful attention to the larger historical influences - the institutions, processes, and interactions - which determined their fates in Singapore. This social history is the companion volume to Rickshaw Coolie: A People's History of Singapore (1880-1940).
The pirates' leader turns out to be Huang Lihua (J. Ō Rika, a.k.a. Huang Baihua/Ō Hyakka), a woman whom Yokoyama had helped out of trouble with the Japanese military when she was posing as a singer in a Xiamen cabaret.
1814 , IOL , G / 21 / 26 , p.1204 ( emphasis added ) . G. King to Messrs . ... George Smith to Josiah Webb , 27 May 1798 , IOL , P / 242 / 5 , p.1599 , and passim . Extract of a letter from Mr. J.F. Sykes to Mr. Benjamin Roebuck ...
This is an innovative study of how British Colonial rule and society in Malayan towns and plantations transformed immigrants into British subjects.
With contributions across social science disciplines, this international collection presents a valuable discussion on the importance of empirical studies in various segments of prostitution, highlights social contexts around it and ...
30 Isabel Tanaka-Van Daalen, “Dutch Attitudes towards Slavery and the Tardy Road to Abolition,” in Hideaki Suzuki (ed.), Abolitions as a Global Experience (Singapore: NUS Press, 2015), 88. 31 Leupp, Interracial Intimacy, 110–111.
A similar attitude towards the migration of sex workers seems to prevail in present-day discussions, ... This is partly a reflection of the fact that migrant women tend to end up relatively often in street prostitution and thus are in ...
This is a pioneering work on "karayuki-san", impoverished Japanese women sent abroad to work as prostitutes from the 1860s to the 1920s.
... ah ku or karayuki-san to survive the first 5 years of prostitution was to do well. To last beyond 30 was to hit a streak of luck. To grow old in brothel prostitution and exit from it in Singapore was to cheat the system—like a gambler ...
28–78 . Aoki , Darren . 2004. “ The Rose Tribes : 223 Bibliography.
8, 10–12; Robert V. Hine and John Mack Faragher, The American West: A New Interpretive History (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2000), chaps. 8–9; Anne M. Butler, Daughters of Joy, Sisters of Misery: Prostitutes in the American West, ...