Description

Book Synopsis

In this unique and insightful book, Markus Bell explores the hidden histories of the men, women, and children who traveled from Japan to the world’s most secretive state—North Korea. Through vivid ethnographic details and interviews with North Korean escapees, Outsiders: Memories of Migration to and from North Korea reveals the driving forces that propelled thousands of ordinary people to risk it all in Kim Il-Sung’s “Worker’s Paradise”, only to escape back to Japan half a century later.



Trade Review

“The ethnographic descriptions are deft, the historical contexts are well drawn, and the emphasis on the multi-generational dynamics of migration flow is exactly on target. The book will certainly be required reading for specialists on Japanese and Korean society and politics but will also be valuable for those interested in refugee issues—especially ‘returns’ of various kinds—and for those assessing the role of international organizations in refugee situations, which can have troubling moral implications. The insights on refugee resilience and the restructuring of memories are also valuable…Highly Recommended.” • Choice

“Overall, Bell combines interviews, thoughtful descriptions, and analysis to provide a meaningful perspective on our understanding a little discussed aspect of East Asian migration. This book explores displacement and migration as well the strategies used by migrants as individuals and families.” • Journal of Contemporary Asia

“Outstanding – academically excellent, full of new research findings, theoretically sophisticated and very well written.” • Tessa Morris-Suzuki, Australian National University



Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Notes on the Text and Confidentiality

Introduction: When There’s Nothing Left

Chapter 1. Remembering the Exodus
Chapter 2. Marriage and Mobility
Chapter 3. Becoming a Foreigner in North Korea
Chapter 4. Choosing Japan
Chapter 5. Freedom, the Impossible Gift
Chapter 6. Mobility, Memory, and the Fractured Self

Conclusion: Reimagining Refugees: From Crisis to Solution in Modern Japan

Appendix: Notes on Methodology

References
Index

Outsiders: Memories of Migration to and from

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    £26.55

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    RRP £27.95 – you save £1.40 (5%)

    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Sat 27 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Markus Bell

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      View other formats and editions of Outsiders: Memories of Migration to and from by Markus Bell

      Publisher: Berghahn Books
      Publication Date: 14/07/2023
      ISBN13: 9781800739130, 978-1800739130
      ISBN10: 1800739133

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      In this unique and insightful book, Markus Bell explores the hidden histories of the men, women, and children who traveled from Japan to the world’s most secretive state—North Korea. Through vivid ethnographic details and interviews with North Korean escapees, Outsiders: Memories of Migration to and from North Korea reveals the driving forces that propelled thousands of ordinary people to risk it all in Kim Il-Sung’s “Worker’s Paradise”, only to escape back to Japan half a century later.



      Trade Review

      “The ethnographic descriptions are deft, the historical contexts are well drawn, and the emphasis on the multi-generational dynamics of migration flow is exactly on target. The book will certainly be required reading for specialists on Japanese and Korean society and politics but will also be valuable for those interested in refugee issues—especially ‘returns’ of various kinds—and for those assessing the role of international organizations in refugee situations, which can have troubling moral implications. The insights on refugee resilience and the restructuring of memories are also valuable…Highly Recommended.” • Choice

      “Overall, Bell combines interviews, thoughtful descriptions, and analysis to provide a meaningful perspective on our understanding a little discussed aspect of East Asian migration. This book explores displacement and migration as well the strategies used by migrants as individuals and families.” • Journal of Contemporary Asia

      “Outstanding – academically excellent, full of new research findings, theoretically sophisticated and very well written.” • Tessa Morris-Suzuki, Australian National University



      Table of Contents

      List of Illustrations
      Acknowledgments
      Notes on the Text and Confidentiality

      Introduction: When There’s Nothing Left

      Chapter 1. Remembering the Exodus
      Chapter 2. Marriage and Mobility
      Chapter 3. Becoming a Foreigner in North Korea
      Chapter 4. Choosing Japan
      Chapter 5. Freedom, the Impossible Gift
      Chapter 6. Mobility, Memory, and the Fractured Self

      Conclusion: Reimagining Refugees: From Crisis to Solution in Modern Japan

      Appendix: Notes on Methodology

      References
      Index

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