Conflicts in drawing Karayuki-san (Book review: Kazue Morisaki., Karayuki-san: Ikoku ni Urareta Shojo-tachi (Karayuki: Girls sold to foreign countries), Tokyo: Asahi Shimbun Publications Inc., 2016)
Kazue Morisaki is a pioneer of women's history in Japan. Around the same time, Tomoko Yamazaki, who sought Morisaki's advice in researching Karayuki-san, became the darling of the times when she wrote "Sandakan Hachi-ban Shokan" (The Eighth Brothel of Sandakan), as a history of women on the bottom, which was awarded the Oya Soichi Non-Fiction Prize, but it was Kazue Morisaki's work that was overwhelmingly favoured by scholars. What is the difference between the public's and the researcher's evaluation? The following is a reading of a series of Morisaki's works, including "Karayuki-san".