Volume 33, Issue 1 p. 149-163
SPECIAL ISSUE

Postwar Reconfigurations of the US Empire and Global Military Occupation: Struggles against Enclosure in Okinawa

Wendy Matsumura

Corresponding Author

Wendy Matsumura

Wendy Matsumura is Associate Professor of History at UC San Diego. She is currently working on a book project, Japanese Grammar: Crisis and Oikonomics after World War I, which traces the formation of the category of noka as the material and ideological basis of Japanese fascism. It examines the way that women from communities excluded from the process enacted new forms of relation out of collective struggle that imagined life otherwise.Search for more papers by this author
First published: 25 February 2020
Citations: 2

Abstract

This article argues through an examination of an anti-base struggle that erupted in early 1950 in Isahama, Okinawa that it is necessary to consider the ways that the so-called new imperialism of the post-World War II period required the transformation of social relations, even in places like Okinawa that are regarded as exceptional sites where US bases and facilities operate through the suspension of sovereignty. It asserts that a focus on the gendered dimensions of antagonisms that developed in Okinawa as the US built its military complexes there allows us to see how local communities, often led by women, fundamentally challenged the base-related enclosures and pushed against the constant ideological work that the language of exception played in normalizing capitalist social relations in general. Finally, it claims that while Okinawa's case may not seem meaningful if taken in its singularity, if we keep in mind that the islands were just one locale within a global military empire that was comprised of hundreds of military complexes containing thousands of bases scattered throughout 64 countries at the height of the Cold War, the destabilizing force of struggles against enclosures as material and ideological sites through which capitalist social relations were naturalized should not be underestimated as valuable shapers of the post-World War II American empire.

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