This paper explores the role of local food markets in the planning and development of complex and dynamic everyday gendered spaces that contribute to island resilience and sustainable development. Based on the case study of Sakaemachi Market in Okinawa, Japan, the research analyses the market in the context of postwar reconstruction, gendered labor, and the politics of Okinawa, a society built on a village-based communal structure centered on shima . The name of the market, meaning ‘Prosperous Town’, anticipates its current role in the protection and promotion of kinship, locality, and collective care. Results show market narratives embedded in historical and spatial foundations that articulate the gendered memory of the evolution from postwar reconstruction to community formation. Results also show the market’s contemporary functions and social infrastructure, the intergenerational labor and cultural transmission involved, and the revitalization and resistance to redevelopment through a constant negotiation of change and continuity.
Ginoza et al. (Tue,) studied this question.