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The marriage market for immigrant families in Chosŏn Korea after the Imjin War: women, integration, and cultural capital
Sangwoo, Han

Date: 2021
Abstract: Challenging the myth of premodern Korea as ethnically homogenous, this study focuses on immigrant marriages in Chosŏn Korea following Japanese invasions (Imjin War, 1592-1598). By examining household registers and genealogies, I investigate the status of women who married into the families of Japanese and Ming Chinese immigrants and the social consequences of such marriages. The results unexpectedly indicate that immigrant families rarely intermarried, preferring integration with local families. As a means of acquiring social and cultural capital, Korean brides from elite families were vital to the success of immigrant families in forming social networks and in producing candidates for the civil service examinations, with failure to obtain such a bride proving a potential long-term obstacle to social advancement. There is a noticeable difference between families of Chinese and Japanese origin in this context due to the preference shown by Korean families for the descendants of Ming generals over Japanese defectors. Contributing to a growing number of studies that question whether the Korean family was fully "Confucianized" in the seventeenth century with a consequent decline in the status of women, this study argues that women possessed social and cultural capital and held particular value for immigrant families.
Grants: European Commission 758347
Rights: Tots els drets reservats.
Language: Anglès
Document: Article ; recerca ; Versió acceptada per publicar
Subject: Hideyoshi's invasions of Korea ; Imjin War ; Immigration ; Korea ; Korean history ; Marriage market ; Status of woman
Published in: International Journal of Asian Studies, 2021, p. 1, ISSN 1479-5922

DOI: 10.1017/S1479591420000558


Post-print
48 p, 1.4 MB

The record appears in these collections:
Articles > Research articles
Articles > Published articles

 Record created 2021-02-08, last modified 2022-09-03



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