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University of California Press

About the Book

A free ebook version of this title is available through Luminos, University of California Press’s Open Access publishing program for monographs. Visit www.luminosoa.org to learn more.

Rules of the House offers a dynamic revisionist account of the Japanese colonial rule of Korea (1910–1945) by examining the roles of women in the civil courts. Challenging the dominant view that women were victimized by the Japanese family laws and its patriarchal biases, Sungyun Lim argues that Korean women had to struggle equally against Korean patriarchal interests. Moreover, women were not passive victims; instead, they proactively struggled to expand their rights by participating in the Japanese colonial legal system. In turn, the Japanese doctrine of promoting progressive legal rights would prove advantageous to them. Following female plaintiffs and their civil disputes from the precolonial Choson dynasty through colonial times and into postcolonial reforms, this book presents a new and groundbreaking story about Korean women’s legal struggles, revealing their surprising collaborative relationship with the colonial state.
 

About the Author

Sungyun Lim is Assistant Professor of Modern Korean and Japanese History at the University of Colorado Boulder.

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Table of Contents

List of Illustrations Acknowledgments

Introduction
1. Widows on the Margins of the Family
2. Widowed Household Heads and the New Boundary of the Family
3. Arguing for Daughters’ Inheritance Rights
4. Conjugal Love and Conjugal Family on Trial
5. Consolidating the Household across the 1945 Divide
Conclusion

Chronology
Glossary
Notes
Bibliography

Reviews

“[An] important contribution to our understanding of Japan’s assimilation policy in Korea.”
Journal of Japanese Studies
"[Lim writes] eloquently about the gendering of society and. . . . accomplish[es] what any scholarly book should do—that is, become the means to investigate, interrogate, and gain new perspectives . . . "
Cross-Currents
"Lim’s clear and persuasive presentation of her findings and of its scholarly significance . . . makes this book a valuable contribution to the historiography of Korea. Its straightforward, accessible, and often compelling narrative also renders it attractive for adoption in both undergraduate and graduate courses."
Journal of Asian Studies
"A timely and fascinating study, demonstrating the complex interplay between gender politics and empire building through the examination of the legal construction of the ideal modern family that was deeply implicated with the invention or appropriation of tradition. A major contribution to gender history, empire studies, and legal studies."—Hyaeweol Choi, author of Gender and Mission Encounters in Korea: New Women, Old Ways

Rules of the House challenges the conventional nationalist narrative of colonial Korea and restores agency to female plaintiffs and defendants. It should be read not only by those interested in colonial Korea and the Japanese empire, but also by historians of comparative and colonial law, the family, and gender.”—Susan L. Burns, Professor of History, University of Chicago