Shidehara Kijuro and his time:
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English Japanese |
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Tōkyō
Japan Publishing Industry Foundation for Culture
March 2020
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Ausgabe: | First English edition |
Schriftenreihe: | Japan library
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Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Übersetzt aus dem Japanischen. - Original: Tōkyō: PHP Kenkyūjo, 2003 Literaturverzeichnis Seite 291-293 |
Beschreibung: | 318 Seiten Illustrationen, Tabelle 23 cm |
ISBN: | 9784866580739 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Contents CHAPTER 1 Diplomat of the New Age —A Typical, Serious Bureaucrat in a Time ofPeace — 13 A New Breed of Japanese Bom in Meiji 13 Middle-Class Family Enthusiastic for Children’s Education 1S Meiji Man-Like Fortitude 16 Calm Political Period under Prime Ministers Katsura and Saionji 19 Saionji Kinmochi’s Mischievous Boyhood 20 Freedom and People’s Rights Advocate but Not Anti-Government 22 Saionji the Politician 24 Taishõ Political Crisis 25 Curtain Opens on a New Era 29 CHAPTER 2 Beginning of an American Century —Emerging Japan Encounters a Rising United States — A Period of Transition in American History 31 Mahan’s The Influence of Sea Power upon History 32 Road to a Great Naval Power 34 President Roosevelt’s Imperialistic Policies 35 US International Politics 37 31
US Discrimination against Japanese 38 Japanese Immigrants Make Whites Wary 41 The American Fleet Visits Japan 41 James Bryce’s Wisdom 43 Democracy’s Self-Corrective Power 44 Shidehara’s Efforts to Prevent Crisis 46 US-Japan Friendship Supported by the Strenuous Efforts of a ľ CHAPTER 3 Chaos on the Continent —Clumsy Handling of the Twenty-One Demands— Views on China after the Xinhai Revolution 51 Sun Yat-sen, The Unyielding Revolutionary 52 Japan as a Base of Operations for Chinese Revolutionaries 54 Miyazaki Toten’s Philosophy 56 Relying on Emerging Japan to Achieve the China Dream 56 Japan’s Aggressive Expansion to Manchuria 58 Twenty-One Greedy Demands 61 The Folly That Drew Universal Censure 64 Was Japan Able to Restore Trust? 66 CHAPTER 4 The Era of the Anglo-Japanese Alliance —The British Gentleman a Modelfor the Japanese— Where Did Shidehara’s Conviction Come From? 69 A Typical British Gentleman 71 Respect for the British Diplomatic Sense 72 British Common Sense and Japanese Anglophilia 74 Shidehara Kijürõ, an Ideal Bureaucrat 76 Times Trend toward Parliamentary Democracy 78 Prelude to Corrupt Party Politics 80 Hara Takashi, Successor to Mutsu Munemitsu’s Will 81 Curtain Rises on Party Politics 83
CHAPTER 5 The Anglo-Japanese Alliance at a Crossroads 87 —How Japan Missed the Chance to Strengthen the Alliance— A Turning Point in History 87 British and American Intentions for Micronesia 88 Samurai-Like Conduct by the Battlecruiser Ibuki 90 Cautious about Japanese Troop Deployment 91 A War between Whites 94 Considerations for the Future Military Balance 95 Britain’s Disappointment 98 Anglo-Japanese Alliance but a Wisp of Paper 100 Nevertheless, Britain Remained Open-Minded 101 Symbolic Meaning of the Dispatch of Japanese Troops 103 CHAPTER 6 The Russian Revolution and the Siberian Intervention 105 —Repercussions of the Revolution Reach Japan— Communism as a Philosophy of Hatred 105 Diffusion of Ideological Anxiety 107 Russo-Japanese Agreement and the Fall of Tsarist Russia 109 British, French, and US Intentions 112 Decision to Send Troops to Siberia 114 Unilateral US Troop Withdrawal 116 Sharpness of Shidehara Diplomacy and Its Pros and Cons 118 A Strategy Based on Maintaining Good Relations with the US 119 Hara Takashi’s Conviction 121 CHAPTER 7 Paris Peace Conference —Alliance Partner’s Skilled Diplomacy Saves Japan—___________________________________________________ 12 5 Japan’s First Big Moment as a First-Rank Country The US Official Position and Actual Intentions 125 126 Proposal on the Abolition of Racial Discrimination 128
Indignant Public in Japan 129 China in Turmoil 131 Nishihara Loans 132 Signing the Lansing-Ishii Agreement 135 Background of the Agreement 137 Saved by Britain Again 138 Two New Trends in the Twentieth Century 141 CHAPTER 8 End of the Anglo-Japanese Alliance —Choice at the Crossroads of Old and New Diplomacy—________________________________________________ 1^3 US Self-Seclusion 143 The Anglo-Japanese Alliance and the United States 144 To Continue the Alliance or Not 145 Balfour’s Draft Proposal 148 Start of Shidehara Diplomacy 149 Hidden Danger in Trust and Self-Confidence 151 Shidehara’s Wilsonian Convictions 154 Is the New Diplomacy Effective for International Peace? 15 6 Alliances and Collective Security 15 8 What If the Anglo-Japanese Alliance Had Been Maintained? 159 CHAPTER 9 Peace and the Military The Insight and Skillful Diplomacy that Made the Washington Conference a Success—163 What Made Arms Reduction Possible? 163 Katõ Tomosaburõ, Shidehara’s Good Partner 165 Y amagata Aritomo’s Death 168 Hara Takashi’s Realism 169 Imperial Defense Policy 172 Two Additional Army Divisions vs. the 8 + 8 Fleet Theoretically Correct Ugaki Proposal 176 The Era of Anti-Militarism 178 A Starting Point for Modem Japan 180 174
CHAPTER 10 The Blossoming of Shidehara Diplomacy —A New Departurefor Japan ’s Diplomacy— 18 3 Hara and Takahashi Cabinets 183 Disillusionment with Party Politics 18 S Conditions for Mature Democracy 18 6 Kiyoura Cabinet Resigns and Three Pro-Constitution Factions Form a Cabinet 188 The Era of Regular Constitutional Government Practices 190 Shidehara Kijürõ, Minister for Foreign Affairs 191 Historic Foreign Policy Speech 192 Persistent Non-Interference in Domestic Chinese Politics 194 Persistence with Principles, No Room for Compromise 197 Supporting China’s Restoration of Tariff Autonomy 198 Sympathetic but Unsentimental Observation 201 CHAPTER 11 The Tide Turns —Public Resentment of Shidehara ’s Cooperative Diplomacy— 203 Changing Tide Undercuts Shidehara Diplomacy 203 China in Turmoil 204 Spread of Soviet Communism 207 Nanjing Incident of 1927 208 China’s Multiple Hearts 211 Formation of the Tanaka Giichi Cabinet 214 Tanaka Giichi, a First-Rate Common Man 216 Mori Kaku, a Product of Imperialism 218 Comintern vs. Chinese Nationalism 221 CHAPTER 12 Tanaka Diplomacy and Chinese Nationalism —The Adverse Impact ofZhang Zuolin ’s Assassination— The First Shandong Expedition 225 Far East Conference and the Tanaka Cabinet’s China Policy 227 225
Prime Minister Tanaka’s Memorandum to the Emperor 2 30 Chiang Kai-shek’s Second Northern Expedition 2 31 Jinan Incident a Turning Point in Sino-Japanese Relations 233 Zhang Zuolin’s Death in an Explosion 236 The Kellogg-Briand Pact 239 The Tanaka Cabinet Resigns 241 Genesis of the Japanese Military’s Arbitrary Conduct 243 CHAPTER 13 Shidehara Diplomacy’s Last Hurrah Shidehara Remained Unchanged in the Midst of Turmoil—_________________ 247 Reappointed Foreign Minister 247 Persuading China and Russia 249 Taishõ Democracy ’ s Last Act 2 S1 Seiyūkai Party Strategy 254 Legal Interpretation of the Autonomy of Military Command 2 55 London Naval Treaty: The Greatest Tragedy for Japan 257 Domestic and International Situations at Dead Ends 259 MacMurray’s Memorandum 261 China’s Revolutionary Diplomacy 263 Japanese Residents in Manchuria Revolt 265 CHAPTER 14 Epilogue: The End of Shidehara Diplomacy —Japan Is Deprived ofa Priceless Diplomatic Asset— Prelude to the Manchurian Incident 269 Imperial Army’s False Obedience 2 71 Catastrophe Just a Matter of Time 272 Shidehara Diplomacy at a Dead End 273 Ishiwara Kanji, a Genius the Imperial Japanese Army Produced 275 Ishiwara’s Plan to Govern Manchuria 277 The Liutiaohu Incident 279 Appeal to the League of Nations 282 Shidehara Diplomacy Fading from the Limelight 283 269
What was Shidehara Diplomacy? 286 Epilogue 287 References 291 APPENDIX Chronogical Table of Shidehara Kijuro’s Life and Accomplishments 294 INDEX 305
Contents CHAPTER 1 Diplomat of the New Age —A Typical, Serious Bureaucrat in a Time ofPeace — 13 A New Breed of Japanese Bom in Meiji 13 Middle-Class Family Enthusiastic for Children’s Education 1S Meiji Man-Like Fortitude 16 Calm Political Period under Prime Ministers Katsura and Saionji 19 Saionji Kinmochi’s Mischievous Boyhood 20 Freedom and People’s Rights Advocate but Not Anti-Government 22 Saionji the Politician 24 Taishõ Political Crisis 25 Curtain Opens on a New Era 29 CHAPTER 2 Beginning of an American Century —Emerging Japan Encounters a Rising United States — A Period of Transition in American History 31 Mahan’s The Influence of Sea Power upon History 32 Road to a Great Naval Power 34 President Roosevelt’s Imperialistic Policies 35 US International Politics 37 31
US Discrimination against Japanese 38 Japanese Immigrants Make Whites Wary 41 The American Fleet Visits Japan 41 James Bryce’s Wisdom 43 Democracy’s Self-Corrective Power 44 Shidehara’s Efforts to Prevent Crisis 46 US-Japan Friendship Supported by the Strenuous Efforts of a ľ CHAPTER 3 Chaos on the Continent —Clumsy Handling of the Twenty-One Demands— Views on China after the Xinhai Revolution 51 Sun Yat-sen, The Unyielding Revolutionary 52 Japan as a Base of Operations for Chinese Revolutionaries 54 Miyazaki Toten’s Philosophy 56 Relying on Emerging Japan to Achieve the China Dream 56 Japan’s Aggressive Expansion to Manchuria 58 Twenty-One Greedy Demands 61 The Folly That Drew Universal Censure 64 Was Japan Able to Restore Trust? 66 CHAPTER 4 The Era of the Anglo-Japanese Alliance —The British Gentleman a Modelfor the Japanese— Where Did Shidehara’s Conviction Come From? 69 A Typical British Gentleman 71 Respect for the British Diplomatic Sense 72 British Common Sense and Japanese Anglophilia 74 Shidehara Kijürõ, an Ideal Bureaucrat 76 Times Trend toward Parliamentary Democracy 78 Prelude to Corrupt Party Politics 80 Hara Takashi, Successor to Mutsu Munemitsu’s Will 81 Curtain Rises on Party Politics 83
CHAPTER 5 The Anglo-Japanese Alliance at a Crossroads 87 —How Japan Missed the Chance to Strengthen the Alliance— A Turning Point in History 87 British and American Intentions for Micronesia 88 Samurai-Like Conduct by the Battlecruiser Ibuki 90 Cautious about Japanese Troop Deployment 91 A War between Whites 94 Considerations for the Future Military Balance 95 Britain’s Disappointment 98 Anglo-Japanese Alliance but a Wisp of Paper 100 Nevertheless, Britain Remained Open-Minded 101 Symbolic Meaning of the Dispatch of Japanese Troops 103 CHAPTER 6 The Russian Revolution and the Siberian Intervention 105 —Repercussions of the Revolution Reach Japan— Communism as a Philosophy of Hatred 105 Diffusion of Ideological Anxiety 107 Russo-Japanese Agreement and the Fall of Tsarist Russia 109 British, French, and US Intentions 112 Decision to Send Troops to Siberia 114 Unilateral US Troop Withdrawal 116 Sharpness of Shidehara Diplomacy and Its Pros and Cons 118 A Strategy Based on Maintaining Good Relations with the US 119 Hara Takashi’s Conviction 121 CHAPTER 7 Paris Peace Conference —Alliance Partner’s Skilled Diplomacy Saves Japan—___________________________________________________ 12 5 Japan’s First Big Moment as a First-Rank Country The US Official Position and Actual Intentions 125 126 Proposal on the Abolition of Racial Discrimination 128
Indignant Public in Japan 129 China in Turmoil 131 Nishihara Loans 132 Signing the Lansing-Ishii Agreement 135 Background of the Agreement 137 Saved by Britain Again 138 Two New Trends in the Twentieth Century 141 CHAPTER 8 End of the Anglo-Japanese Alliance —Choice at the Crossroads of Old and New Diplomacy—________________________________________________ 1^3 US Self-Seclusion 143 The Anglo-Japanese Alliance and the United States 144 To Continue the Alliance or Not 145 Balfour’s Draft Proposal 148 Start of Shidehara Diplomacy 149 Hidden Danger in Trust and Self-Confidence 151 Shidehara’s Wilsonian Convictions 154 Is the New Diplomacy Effective for International Peace? 15 6 Alliances and Collective Security 15 8 What If the Anglo-Japanese Alliance Had Been Maintained? 159 CHAPTER 9 Peace and the Military The Insight and Skillful Diplomacy that Made the Washington Conference a Success—163 What Made Arms Reduction Possible? 163 Katõ Tomosaburõ, Shidehara’s Good Partner 165 Y amagata Aritomo’s Death 168 Hara Takashi’s Realism 169 Imperial Defense Policy 172 Two Additional Army Divisions vs. the 8 + 8 Fleet Theoretically Correct Ugaki Proposal 176 The Era of Anti-Militarism 178 A Starting Point for Modem Japan 180 174
CHAPTER 10 The Blossoming of Shidehara Diplomacy —A New Departurefor Japan ’s Diplomacy— 18 3 Hara and Takahashi Cabinets 183 Disillusionment with Party Politics 18 S Conditions for Mature Democracy 18 6 Kiyoura Cabinet Resigns and Three Pro-Constitution Factions Form a Cabinet 188 The Era of Regular Constitutional Government Practices 190 Shidehara Kijürõ, Minister for Foreign Affairs 191 Historic Foreign Policy Speech 192 Persistent Non-Interference in Domestic Chinese Politics 194 Persistence with Principles, No Room for Compromise 197 Supporting China’s Restoration of Tariff Autonomy 198 Sympathetic but Unsentimental Observation 201 CHAPTER 11 The Tide Turns —Public Resentment of Shidehara ’s Cooperative Diplomacy— 203 Changing Tide Undercuts Shidehara Diplomacy 203 China in Turmoil 204 Spread of Soviet Communism 207 Nanjing Incident of 1927 208 China’s Multiple Hearts 211 Formation of the Tanaka Giichi Cabinet 214 Tanaka Giichi, a First-Rate Common Man 216 Mori Kaku, a Product of Imperialism 218 Comintern vs. Chinese Nationalism 221 CHAPTER 12 Tanaka Diplomacy and Chinese Nationalism —The Adverse Impact ofZhang Zuolin ’s Assassination— The First Shandong Expedition 225 Far East Conference and the Tanaka Cabinet’s China Policy 227 225
Prime Minister Tanaka’s Memorandum to the Emperor 2 30 Chiang Kai-shek’s Second Northern Expedition 2 31 Jinan Incident a Turning Point in Sino-Japanese Relations 233 Zhang Zuolin’s Death in an Explosion 236 The Kellogg-Briand Pact 239 The Tanaka Cabinet Resigns 241 Genesis of the Japanese Military’s Arbitrary Conduct 243 CHAPTER 13 Shidehara Diplomacy’s Last Hurrah Shidehara Remained Unchanged in the Midst of Turmoil—_________________ 247 Reappointed Foreign Minister 247 Persuading China and Russia 249 Taishõ Democracy ’ s Last Act 2 S1 Seiyūkai Party Strategy 254 Legal Interpretation of the Autonomy of Military Command 2 55 London Naval Treaty: The Greatest Tragedy for Japan 257 Domestic and International Situations at Dead Ends 259 MacMurray’s Memorandum 261 China’s Revolutionary Diplomacy 263 Japanese Residents in Manchuria Revolt 265 CHAPTER 14 Epilogue: The End of Shidehara Diplomacy —Japan Is Deprived ofa Priceless Diplomatic Asset— Prelude to the Manchurian Incident 269 Imperial Army’s False Obedience 2 71 Catastrophe Just a Matter of Time 272 Shidehara Diplomacy at a Dead End 273 Ishiwara Kanji, a Genius the Imperial Japanese Army Produced 275 Ishiwara’s Plan to Govern Manchuria 277 The Liutiaohu Incident 279 Appeal to the League of Nations 282 Shidehara Diplomacy Fading from the Limelight 283 269
What was Shidehara Diplomacy? 286 Epilogue 287 References 291 APPENDIX Chronogical Table of Shidehara Kijuro’s Life and Accomplishments 294 INDEX 305
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adam_txt |
Contents CHAPTER 1 Diplomat of the New Age —A Typical, Serious Bureaucrat in a Time ofPeace — 13 A New Breed of Japanese Bom in Meiji 13 Middle-Class Family Enthusiastic for Children’s Education 1S Meiji Man-Like Fortitude 16 Calm Political Period under Prime Ministers Katsura and Saionji 19 Saionji Kinmochi’s Mischievous Boyhood 20 Freedom and People’s Rights Advocate but Not Anti-Government 22 Saionji the Politician 24 Taishõ Political Crisis 25 Curtain Opens on a New Era 29 CHAPTER 2 Beginning of an American Century —Emerging Japan Encounters a Rising United States — A Period of Transition in American History 31 Mahan’s The Influence of Sea Power upon History 32 Road to a Great Naval Power 34 President Roosevelt’s Imperialistic Policies 35 US International Politics 37 31
US Discrimination against Japanese 38 Japanese Immigrants Make Whites Wary 41 The American Fleet Visits Japan 41 James Bryce’s Wisdom 43 Democracy’s Self-Corrective Power 44 Shidehara’s Efforts to Prevent Crisis 46 US-Japan Friendship Supported by the Strenuous Efforts of a ľ CHAPTER 3 Chaos on the Continent —Clumsy Handling of the Twenty-One Demands— Views on China after the Xinhai Revolution 51 Sun Yat-sen, The Unyielding Revolutionary 52 Japan as a Base of Operations for Chinese Revolutionaries 54 Miyazaki Toten’s Philosophy 56 Relying on Emerging Japan to Achieve the China Dream 56 Japan’s Aggressive Expansion to Manchuria 58 Twenty-One Greedy Demands 61 The Folly That Drew Universal Censure 64 Was Japan Able to Restore Trust? 66 CHAPTER 4 The Era of the Anglo-Japanese Alliance —The British Gentleman a Modelfor the Japanese— Where Did Shidehara’s Conviction Come From? 69 A Typical British Gentleman 71 Respect for the British Diplomatic Sense 72 British Common Sense and Japanese Anglophilia 74 Shidehara Kijürõ, an Ideal Bureaucrat 76 Times Trend toward Parliamentary Democracy 78 Prelude to Corrupt Party Politics 80 Hara Takashi, Successor to Mutsu Munemitsu’s Will 81 Curtain Rises on Party Politics 83
CHAPTER 5 The Anglo-Japanese Alliance at a Crossroads 87 —How Japan Missed the Chance to Strengthen the Alliance— A Turning Point in History 87 British and American Intentions for Micronesia 88 Samurai-Like Conduct by the Battlecruiser Ibuki 90 Cautious about Japanese Troop Deployment 91 A War between Whites 94 Considerations for the Future Military Balance 95 Britain’s Disappointment 98 Anglo-Japanese Alliance but a Wisp of Paper 100 Nevertheless, Britain Remained Open-Minded 101 Symbolic Meaning of the Dispatch of Japanese Troops 103 CHAPTER 6 The Russian Revolution and the Siberian Intervention 105 —Repercussions of the Revolution Reach Japan— Communism as a Philosophy of Hatred 105 Diffusion of Ideological Anxiety 107 Russo-Japanese Agreement and the Fall of Tsarist Russia 109 British, French, and US Intentions 112 Decision to Send Troops to Siberia 114 Unilateral US Troop Withdrawal 116 Sharpness of Shidehara Diplomacy and Its Pros and Cons 118 A Strategy Based on Maintaining Good Relations with the US 119 Hara Takashi’s Conviction 121 CHAPTER 7 Paris Peace Conference —Alliance Partner’s Skilled Diplomacy Saves Japan—_ 12 5 Japan’s First Big Moment as a First-Rank Country The US Official Position and Actual Intentions 125 126 Proposal on the Abolition of Racial Discrimination 128
Indignant Public in Japan 129 China in Turmoil 131 Nishihara Loans 132 Signing the Lansing-Ishii Agreement 135 Background of the Agreement 137 Saved by Britain Again 138 Two New Trends in the Twentieth Century 141 CHAPTER 8 End of the Anglo-Japanese Alliance —Choice at the Crossroads of Old and New Diplomacy—_ 1^3 US Self-Seclusion 143 The Anglo-Japanese Alliance and the United States 144 To Continue the Alliance or Not 145 Balfour’s Draft Proposal 148 Start of Shidehara Diplomacy 149 Hidden Danger in Trust and Self-Confidence 151 Shidehara’s Wilsonian Convictions 154 Is the New Diplomacy Effective for International Peace? 15 6 Alliances and Collective Security 15 8 What If the Anglo-Japanese Alliance Had Been Maintained? 159 CHAPTER 9 Peace and the Military The Insight and Skillful Diplomacy that Made the Washington Conference a Success—163 What Made Arms Reduction Possible? 163 Katõ Tomosaburõ, Shidehara’s Good Partner 165 Y amagata Aritomo’s Death 168 Hara Takashi’s Realism 169 Imperial Defense Policy 172 Two Additional Army Divisions vs. the 8 + 8 Fleet Theoretically Correct Ugaki Proposal 176 The Era of Anti-Militarism 178 A Starting Point for Modem Japan 180 174
CHAPTER 10 The Blossoming of Shidehara Diplomacy —A New Departurefor Japan ’s Diplomacy— 18 3 Hara and Takahashi Cabinets 183 Disillusionment with Party Politics 18 S Conditions for Mature Democracy 18 6 Kiyoura Cabinet Resigns and Three Pro-Constitution Factions Form a Cabinet 188 The Era of Regular Constitutional Government Practices 190 Shidehara Kijürõ, Minister for Foreign Affairs 191 Historic Foreign Policy Speech 192 Persistent Non-Interference in Domestic Chinese Politics 194 Persistence with Principles, No Room for Compromise 197 Supporting China’s Restoration of Tariff Autonomy 198 Sympathetic but Unsentimental Observation 201 CHAPTER 11 The Tide Turns —Public Resentment of Shidehara ’s Cooperative Diplomacy— 203 Changing Tide Undercuts Shidehara Diplomacy 203 China in Turmoil 204 Spread of Soviet Communism 207 Nanjing Incident of 1927 208 China’s Multiple Hearts 211 Formation of the Tanaka Giichi Cabinet 214 Tanaka Giichi, a First-Rate Common Man 216 Mori Kaku, a Product of Imperialism 218 Comintern vs. Chinese Nationalism 221 CHAPTER 12 Tanaka Diplomacy and Chinese Nationalism —The Adverse Impact ofZhang Zuolin ’s Assassination— The First Shandong Expedition 225 Far East Conference and the Tanaka Cabinet’s China Policy 227 225
Prime Minister Tanaka’s Memorandum to the Emperor 2 30 Chiang Kai-shek’s Second Northern Expedition 2 31 Jinan Incident a Turning Point in Sino-Japanese Relations 233 Zhang Zuolin’s Death in an Explosion 236 The Kellogg-Briand Pact 239 The Tanaka Cabinet Resigns 241 Genesis of the Japanese Military’s Arbitrary Conduct 243 CHAPTER 13 Shidehara Diplomacy’s Last Hurrah Shidehara Remained Unchanged in the Midst of Turmoil—_ 247 Reappointed Foreign Minister 247 Persuading China and Russia 249 Taishõ Democracy ’ s Last Act 2 S1 Seiyūkai Party Strategy 254 Legal Interpretation of the Autonomy of Military Command 2 55 London Naval Treaty: The Greatest Tragedy for Japan 257 Domestic and International Situations at Dead Ends 259 MacMurray’s Memorandum 261 China’s Revolutionary Diplomacy 263 Japanese Residents in Manchuria Revolt 265 CHAPTER 14 Epilogue: The End of Shidehara Diplomacy —Japan Is Deprived ofa Priceless Diplomatic Asset— Prelude to the Manchurian Incident 269 Imperial Army’s False Obedience 2 71 Catastrophe Just a Matter of Time 272 Shidehara Diplomacy at a Dead End 273 Ishiwara Kanji, a Genius the Imperial Japanese Army Produced 275 Ishiwara’s Plan to Govern Manchuria 277 The Liutiaohu Incident 279 Appeal to the League of Nations 282 Shidehara Diplomacy Fading from the Limelight 283 269
What was Shidehara Diplomacy? 286 Epilogue 287 References 291 APPENDIX Chronogical Table of Shidehara Kijuro’s Life and Accomplishments 294 INDEX 305
Contents CHAPTER 1 Diplomat of the New Age —A Typical, Serious Bureaucrat in a Time ofPeace — 13 A New Breed of Japanese Bom in Meiji 13 Middle-Class Family Enthusiastic for Children’s Education 1S Meiji Man-Like Fortitude 16 Calm Political Period under Prime Ministers Katsura and Saionji 19 Saionji Kinmochi’s Mischievous Boyhood 20 Freedom and People’s Rights Advocate but Not Anti-Government 22 Saionji the Politician 24 Taishõ Political Crisis 25 Curtain Opens on a New Era 29 CHAPTER 2 Beginning of an American Century —Emerging Japan Encounters a Rising United States — A Period of Transition in American History 31 Mahan’s The Influence of Sea Power upon History 32 Road to a Great Naval Power 34 President Roosevelt’s Imperialistic Policies 35 US International Politics 37 31
US Discrimination against Japanese 38 Japanese Immigrants Make Whites Wary 41 The American Fleet Visits Japan 41 James Bryce’s Wisdom 43 Democracy’s Self-Corrective Power 44 Shidehara’s Efforts to Prevent Crisis 46 US-Japan Friendship Supported by the Strenuous Efforts of a ľ CHAPTER 3 Chaos on the Continent —Clumsy Handling of the Twenty-One Demands— Views on China after the Xinhai Revolution 51 Sun Yat-sen, The Unyielding Revolutionary 52 Japan as a Base of Operations for Chinese Revolutionaries 54 Miyazaki Toten’s Philosophy 56 Relying on Emerging Japan to Achieve the China Dream 56 Japan’s Aggressive Expansion to Manchuria 58 Twenty-One Greedy Demands 61 The Folly That Drew Universal Censure 64 Was Japan Able to Restore Trust? 66 CHAPTER 4 The Era of the Anglo-Japanese Alliance —The British Gentleman a Modelfor the Japanese— Where Did Shidehara’s Conviction Come From? 69 A Typical British Gentleman 71 Respect for the British Diplomatic Sense 72 British Common Sense and Japanese Anglophilia 74 Shidehara Kijürõ, an Ideal Bureaucrat 76 Times Trend toward Parliamentary Democracy 78 Prelude to Corrupt Party Politics 80 Hara Takashi, Successor to Mutsu Munemitsu’s Will 81 Curtain Rises on Party Politics 83
CHAPTER 5 The Anglo-Japanese Alliance at a Crossroads 87 —How Japan Missed the Chance to Strengthen the Alliance— A Turning Point in History 87 British and American Intentions for Micronesia 88 Samurai-Like Conduct by the Battlecruiser Ibuki 90 Cautious about Japanese Troop Deployment 91 A War between Whites 94 Considerations for the Future Military Balance 95 Britain’s Disappointment 98 Anglo-Japanese Alliance but a Wisp of Paper 100 Nevertheless, Britain Remained Open-Minded 101 Symbolic Meaning of the Dispatch of Japanese Troops 103 CHAPTER 6 The Russian Revolution and the Siberian Intervention 105 —Repercussions of the Revolution Reach Japan— Communism as a Philosophy of Hatred 105 Diffusion of Ideological Anxiety 107 Russo-Japanese Agreement and the Fall of Tsarist Russia 109 British, French, and US Intentions 112 Decision to Send Troops to Siberia 114 Unilateral US Troop Withdrawal 116 Sharpness of Shidehara Diplomacy and Its Pros and Cons 118 A Strategy Based on Maintaining Good Relations with the US 119 Hara Takashi’s Conviction 121 CHAPTER 7 Paris Peace Conference —Alliance Partner’s Skilled Diplomacy Saves Japan—_ 12 5 Japan’s First Big Moment as a First-Rank Country The US Official Position and Actual Intentions 125 126 Proposal on the Abolition of Racial Discrimination 128
Indignant Public in Japan 129 China in Turmoil 131 Nishihara Loans 132 Signing the Lansing-Ishii Agreement 135 Background of the Agreement 137 Saved by Britain Again 138 Two New Trends in the Twentieth Century 141 CHAPTER 8 End of the Anglo-Japanese Alliance —Choice at the Crossroads of Old and New Diplomacy—_ 1^3 US Self-Seclusion 143 The Anglo-Japanese Alliance and the United States 144 To Continue the Alliance or Not 145 Balfour’s Draft Proposal 148 Start of Shidehara Diplomacy 149 Hidden Danger in Trust and Self-Confidence 151 Shidehara’s Wilsonian Convictions 154 Is the New Diplomacy Effective for International Peace? 15 6 Alliances and Collective Security 15 8 What If the Anglo-Japanese Alliance Had Been Maintained? 159 CHAPTER 9 Peace and the Military The Insight and Skillful Diplomacy that Made the Washington Conference a Success—163 What Made Arms Reduction Possible? 163 Katõ Tomosaburõ, Shidehara’s Good Partner 165 Y amagata Aritomo’s Death 168 Hara Takashi’s Realism 169 Imperial Defense Policy 172 Two Additional Army Divisions vs. the 8 + 8 Fleet Theoretically Correct Ugaki Proposal 176 The Era of Anti-Militarism 178 A Starting Point for Modem Japan 180 174
CHAPTER 10 The Blossoming of Shidehara Diplomacy —A New Departurefor Japan ’s Diplomacy— 18 3 Hara and Takahashi Cabinets 183 Disillusionment with Party Politics 18 S Conditions for Mature Democracy 18 6 Kiyoura Cabinet Resigns and Three Pro-Constitution Factions Form a Cabinet 188 The Era of Regular Constitutional Government Practices 190 Shidehara Kijürõ, Minister for Foreign Affairs 191 Historic Foreign Policy Speech 192 Persistent Non-Interference in Domestic Chinese Politics 194 Persistence with Principles, No Room for Compromise 197 Supporting China’s Restoration of Tariff Autonomy 198 Sympathetic but Unsentimental Observation 201 CHAPTER 11 The Tide Turns —Public Resentment of Shidehara ’s Cooperative Diplomacy— 203 Changing Tide Undercuts Shidehara Diplomacy 203 China in Turmoil 204 Spread of Soviet Communism 207 Nanjing Incident of 1927 208 China’s Multiple Hearts 211 Formation of the Tanaka Giichi Cabinet 214 Tanaka Giichi, a First-Rate Common Man 216 Mori Kaku, a Product of Imperialism 218 Comintern vs. Chinese Nationalism 221 CHAPTER 12 Tanaka Diplomacy and Chinese Nationalism —The Adverse Impact ofZhang Zuolin ’s Assassination— The First Shandong Expedition 225 Far East Conference and the Tanaka Cabinet’s China Policy 227 225
Prime Minister Tanaka’s Memorandum to the Emperor 2 30 Chiang Kai-shek’s Second Northern Expedition 2 31 Jinan Incident a Turning Point in Sino-Japanese Relations 233 Zhang Zuolin’s Death in an Explosion 236 The Kellogg-Briand Pact 239 The Tanaka Cabinet Resigns 241 Genesis of the Japanese Military’s Arbitrary Conduct 243 CHAPTER 13 Shidehara Diplomacy’s Last Hurrah Shidehara Remained Unchanged in the Midst of Turmoil—_ 247 Reappointed Foreign Minister 247 Persuading China and Russia 249 Taishõ Democracy ’ s Last Act 2 S1 Seiyūkai Party Strategy 254 Legal Interpretation of the Autonomy of Military Command 2 55 London Naval Treaty: The Greatest Tragedy for Japan 257 Domestic and International Situations at Dead Ends 259 MacMurray’s Memorandum 261 China’s Revolutionary Diplomacy 263 Japanese Residents in Manchuria Revolt 265 CHAPTER 14 Epilogue: The End of Shidehara Diplomacy —Japan Is Deprived ofa Priceless Diplomatic Asset— Prelude to the Manchurian Incident 269 Imperial Army’s False Obedience 2 71 Catastrophe Just a Matter of Time 272 Shidehara Diplomacy at a Dead End 273 Ishiwara Kanji, a Genius the Imperial Japanese Army Produced 275 Ishiwara’s Plan to Govern Manchuria 277 The Liutiaohu Incident 279 Appeal to the League of Nations 282 Shidehara Diplomacy Fading from the Limelight 283 269
What was Shidehara Diplomacy? 286 Epilogue 287 References 291 APPENDIX Chronogical Table of Shidehara Kijuro’s Life and Accomplishments 294 INDEX 305 |
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author | Okazaki, Hisahiko 1930-2014 |
author2 | Noda, Makito 1951- |
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author_facet | Okazaki, Hisahiko 1930-2014 Noda, Makito 1951- |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Okazaki, Hisahiko 1930-2014 |
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building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV047059597 |
classification_rvk | MH 48040 NP 6600 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)1226700761 (DE-599)BVBBV047059597 |
discipline | Politologie Geschichte |
discipline_str_mv | Politologie Geschichte |
edition | First English edition |
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index_date | 2024-07-03T16:11:09Z |
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institution | BVB |
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isbn | 9784866580739 |
language | English Japanese |
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spelling | 880-01 Okazaki, Hisahiko 1930-2014 Verfasser (DE-588)172293936 aut Shidehara Kijūrō to sono jidai Shidehara Kijuro and his time Okazaki Hisahiko ; translated by Makito Noda 880-04 First English edition Tōkyō Japan Publishing Industry Foundation for Culture March 2020 © 2020 318 Seiten Illustrationen, Tabelle 23 cm txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Japan library Übersetzt aus dem Japanischen. - Original: Tōkyō: PHP Kenkyūjo, 2003 Literaturverzeichnis Seite 291-293 Shidehara, Kijûrô 1872-1951 (DE-588)120646129 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4006804-3 Biografie gnd-content Shidehara, Kijûrô 1872-1951 (DE-588)120646129 p DE-604 880-02 Noda, Makito 1951- (DE-588)1098224345 trl 880-03 Nihon-Kokusai-Mondai-Kenkyūsho (Tokio) (DE-588)1033597-3 isb Digitalisierung UB Bamberg - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032466791&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis Digitalisierung UB Bamberg - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032466791&sequence=000003&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis 100-01/$1 岡崎, 久彦 ut 700-02/$1 野田, 牧人 trl 710-03/$1 日本国際問題研究所 4isb 250-04/$1 英文版 |
spellingShingle | Okazaki, Hisahiko 1930-2014 Shidehara Kijuro and his time Shidehara, Kijûrô 1872-1951 (DE-588)120646129 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)120646129 (DE-588)4006804-3 |
title | Shidehara Kijuro and his time |
title_alt | Shidehara Kijūrō to sono jidai |
title_auth | Shidehara Kijuro and his time |
title_exact_search | Shidehara Kijuro and his time |
title_exact_search_txtP | Shidehara Kijuro and his time |
title_full | Shidehara Kijuro and his time Okazaki Hisahiko ; translated by Makito Noda |
title_fullStr | Shidehara Kijuro and his time Okazaki Hisahiko ; translated by Makito Noda |
title_full_unstemmed | Shidehara Kijuro and his time Okazaki Hisahiko ; translated by Makito Noda |
title_short | Shidehara Kijuro and his time |
title_sort | shidehara kijuro and his time |
topic | Shidehara, Kijûrô 1872-1951 (DE-588)120646129 gnd |
topic_facet | Shidehara, Kijûrô 1872-1951 Biografie |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032466791&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032466791&sequence=000003&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
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