Proceedings of
International Conference on Advances In Economics, Management and Social Study EMS 2014
"A SOCIO-HISTORICAL STUDY ABOUT THE MARGINALIZED STATUS OF JAPANESE LEATHER WORKERS"
Abstract: “This paper reflects on the low social status of Japan‟s leatherworkers, whose position in the social hierarchy has for centuries been that of untouchables or Burakumin (outcastes) and who were sometimes called by the most derogatory of Japanese terms, „eta,’ which means „filth.‟ There are three economic and historical roots to this enduring social stigma, two of them having to do with the demand of the military for leather armor, saddlery and other gear. First, in the 16th century, a truce between warring clans, achieved by the Tokugawa shogunate, brought with it a decrease in the demand for leather armor and other military trappings, thereby undermining the economic base of buraku communities; (2) at the same time, weak Japanese guilds left leather workers in servitude to leather merchants and the state, ultimately forcing them to accept their social status as untouchable pollutants and (3) the Meiji restoration in the late 19th century included a modernized military that required cop”
Keywords: leather workers, Japanese untouchables, the pure and the impure, guilds, pollution