
Hannah Shepherd, "The Narrowing Sea: Fukuoka, Pusan, and the Rise and Fall of an Imperial Region" (U California Press, 2025)
From New Books in History by Marshall Poe
May 29, 2026 · 1h 18m
About this episode
Hannah Shepherd discusses her book on the intertwined histories of Fukuoka and Pusan from the late 19th century to the Korean War.
In The Narrowing Sea: Fukuoka, Pusan, and the Rise and Fall of an Imperial Region (U California Press, 2025), Hannah Shepherd examines the shared histories of Pusan and Fukuoka over the eight decades from Japan's forced opening of Korea's ports in 1876 to the end of the Korean War in 1953. One city was Korean, the other Japanese; one was a burgeoning colonial port, the other a provincial city buoyed by imperial expansion. Wars, colonization, and capitalist industrialization forged intimate connections between the two, knitting together an imperial region that transcended its maritime boundaries. Drawing on both Japanese and Korean archives, and emphasizing the concept of imperial urbanization, Shepherd challenges traditional views of empire and urban growth and shows how local networks, migration, and capital flows shaped the region's exploitative and uneven geographies. The waters between Fukuoka and Pusan narrowed through intensified interactions that continued even after the end of empire, creating enduring legacies for the postwar and postcolonial eras. Dr. Hannah Shepherd is Assistant Professor of History at Yale University. Dr. Samee Siddiqui is Assistant Professor of World…
People in this episode
Host: Marshall Poe
Guest: Hannah Shepherd
Topics covered
- imperial history
- urbanization
- colonialism
- Korea
- Japan
- migration
- capitalism
Keywords
- Fukuoka
- Pusan
- imperial region
- colonial port
- Korean War
- urban growth
- migration
- capital flows
Mentioned in this episode
Organizations: Yale University, Drury University, U California Press
Books & works: The Narrowing Sea: Fukuoka, Pusan, and the Rise and Fall of an Imperial Region
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