Competing imperialisms in Northeast Asia: new perspectives, 1894-1953
"In the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries, the states of Japan, China and both Tsarist Russia and later the USSR, vied for imperial dominance in Northeast Asia. In the process, they contested and at the same time adopted, many of the physical and rhetorical features of Old-World imp...
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London ; New York
Routledge
2024
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Schriftenreihe: | Routledge studies in the modern history of Asia
183 |
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Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis Register // Gemischte Register |
Zusammenfassung: | "In the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries, the states of Japan, China and both Tsarist Russia and later the USSR, vied for imperial dominance in Northeast Asia. In the process, they contested and at the same time adopted, many of the physical and rhetorical features of Old-World imperialism, mitigated by domestic political forces and deeply ingrained cultural and historical values. With chapters written by scholars from Europe and Asia, including Russia, this book offers an international and interdisciplinary perspective on the competing imperialisms in Northeast Asia in the period 1894-1953, exploring the encounters between old rivals and new protagonists. Bringing together specialists from different disciplines and drawing on newly-discovered and hard-to-access sources, it presents a uniquely comparative and holistic perspective on the symbiotic relationships of these regional powers and resistance to them. The contributors focus on four key areas - ideology, rivalry and territoriality, social factors, and visual representations. A valuable resource for students and scholars of modern Northeast-Asian history, and highly pertinent to understanding the imperial posturing between some of the same protagonists today." |
Beschreibung: | xi, 275 Seiten Illustrationen, Karten |
ISBN: | 9780367648237 9780367648244 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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Contents Foreword· x PETER O’CONNOR Note on Transliteration List of Contributors xii xiii 1 Introduction AGLAIA DE ANGELI AND PETER ROBINSON PARTI Imperialism in Northeast Asia: Drivers and Structures 15 SAITÖ EIRI, CHRISTOPHER W. A. SZPILMAN, AND TSUCHIYA REIKO 1 The Role of the Internal Colony in Empire and Imperialism: Japan and Britain Compared 17 SAITÖ EIRI 2 Social Darwinism as a Factor in Japanese Territorial Expansion, 1914—1941 32 CHRISTOPHER W. A. SZPILMAN 3 Media and Imperialism in International Press Conferences in the Early Twentieth Century 47 TSUCHIYA REIKO PART II Imperial Rivalries and Questions of Territoriality: Russia and Japan in Northeast Asia SHERZOD MUMINOV, ALEXANDER TITOV, KOBAYASHI AKINA, YAROSLAV SHULATOV, AND DENIS G. YANCHENKO 63
viii Contents 4 Reconsidering Japan’s Preoccupation with Soviet Power in East Asia, 1917-1937 65 SHERZOD MUMINOV 5 National Appropriation of Imperial Lands in Northeast Asia 85 ALEXANDER TITOV 6 From Japanese Militarism to Soviet Communism: The ‘Change of Heart’ of Japanese POWs through Soviet Indoctrination 106 KOBAYASHI AKINA 7 The Key Rivalry: Russo-Japanese Relations and International Order in Northeast Asia, 1895-1945 121 YAROSLAV SHULATOV 8 Government of Nicholas II and the Economy of the Far East in Russian Archival Materials 137 DENIS G. YANCHENKO PART III Imperialism and Society: Actors and Victims, Migrants and the Dispossessed 155 YUEXIN RACHEL LIN, MIKWI CHO, PETER O’CONNOR, AND NIKITA KOVRIGIN 9 “We Are on the Brink of Disaster”: Revolution, War, and Imperial Conflict in Blagoveshchensk-Heihe 157 YUEXIN RACHEL LIN 10 Subversive or Ambitious? Migration of Korean Students to the Metropole and the Response of the Empire, 1910-1933 172 MIKWI CHO 11 Compradors of Opinion: Irish Adventurers on the Road to Systemic Change in Northeast Asia, 1916-1949 191 PETER O’CONNOR 12 Shaping Chinese Communities in Japan and Russia: The Role of Political Factors NIKITA KOVRIGIN 206
Contents ix PART IV Visualising Competing Imperialisms 223 PETER ROBINSON AND AGLAIA DE ANGELI 13 Picturing Imperialisms in Northeast Asia: Illustrations for The Times’s Japanese and Russian Supplements, 1910-1917 225 PETER ROBINSON 14 Competing Imperialisms in Manchuria: Mapping a Contested and Disputed Territory 247 AGLAIA DE ANGELI Index 265
Index Pages followed by “n” refer to notes. Abiko Taro 56 Aiga Kotaro 56 Aigun 157-161,164-166,168nl, 208, 254,259 Ainu 85, 94, 99; and Hokkaido 22-23, 25,28nl7, 87, 97,134n3 Air Force Academy 116 Aleksandrovsk 99 All-American Regional Conference 57 All-Japan Former Internees Association 110 Amur expedition 148 Amur Krai see Amur Oblast; Amur region Amur Oblast lOlnl, 163-165, 208; see also Amur region Amur Oblast Overseas Chinese Association 163-167,168n3,168n4 Amur region 96, 139,163; and population 138; and resettlement 144, 146; and trade 158, 160, 166; see also Amur Oblast Amur River 92, 157-159, 213, 254 Anami Korechika 36 Anderson, Benedict 175 Anderson, Kenneth 2 Andong 33 Anglo-Irish Treaty (1921) 191,195 Anglo-Japanese Alliance 27n6, 225, 227, 231, 234, 245n9 Russo-Japanese Alliance 127 Anglo-Saxon 37-38,40-41, 59,129 anti-Bolshevik 158-162 anti-colonial movement 125,128 Anti-Comintern Pact 129 anti-Japanese movement 49 Araki Sadao 36, 74-75 Archangel(sk) 215, 241-242 Army War College 39,113 Arsen’ev, Vladimir K. 98 Asahi Shinbun 48-49, 56, 59n3, 60n6 Asia-Pacific War see Pacific War Associated Press 196-198 Australia 56, 198, 209; Commonwealth of 47; and dominium state 20; and emigrants 18, 218 autarky 34, 42, 130; see also self-sufficiency Baikal Lake 128 Baikal-Amur rail line (BAM) 89 Bank of Taiwan 229-230 Bao Guiqing 160 Basic Treaty (1925) 69 Battle of Khalkin Gol 130 Battle of Lake Khasan 129 Battle of Mukden 67 Battle of Stalingrad 131 Beijing Basic Convention 77 Beijing Daily 52 Beijing 90, 128, 140, 144; and authority 123, 159-160, 162-167, 217; and
Basic Convention 71, 77; and museum 100; and newspapers 49-52,54 Beijing Times 51-52 Benyovszky, Maurice 121,134nl Berlin University 24 Berlin 130-131,143 Bethell, Ernest 201 Blagoveshchensk 77, 161, 164-165, 213, 254; and Heihe 157-160, 163; and massacre 159,163-164,166; and Reds 161-162,167 BoerWar (1899-1902) 225
266 Index Bogaerde, Ulric van den 225-226, 235, 238,241-245 Bolshevik government 65 Bolsheviks 65-66, 68, 95,161-163, 215; and Japan 127-128 Border Guard Corps 142, 150 Borneo 48 Boxer Protocol 2 Boxer Rebellion 3,9,137, 157-158; and Boer War 225; and Russia 124, 163,165,212-213,219 Boxer Uprising see Boxer Rebellion Boxers 143,157 Breslau 101 Brinkley, Francis 193-194,196-198, 200-201 British museum 241 Buckle, Geoffrey 226 Buddhist 41 Bullitt, William C. 78 Busan 108 Byas, Hugh F. 227 Catherine the Great 86 Central Intelligence Agency 115 Central Plains Confucian Culture of the Great Unity 94 Chamber of Commerce 52, 158, 167 Changchun 141,252, 259 Chekhov museum 98 Chekhov, Anton P. 98 Cherniaev, Mikhail G. 88 Chiang Kai-shek 72,92, 204 China Daily 48 China Press 56, 61nl8 Chinese Civil War (1945-1949) 1 Chinese Communist Party (CCP) 98, 100,217 Chinese Eastern Railway (CER) 76, 80, 98, 148-150, 216; and company 139-145; and construction 209; and railway station 259-261; and Russia 124-126, 128-129, 257; and South Manchuria Railway 126, 252, 254,261 Chinese Imperial Maritime Customs (CIMC) 252, 257-261, 262nll Chinese migration: to Japan 206-207, 209, 213-214, 216, 218-219; to Manchuria 90; to Russia 206, 208-209,214-216,218 Chinese newspaper 50-54, 57 Chishima see Kuril Islands Chita 139,144 Chösen see Korean peninsula Chugai 58 Chung Han-gyeong 57 Chung, Henry 57 Churchill, Winston 131 civilizing mission 92-93, 238 Clarke, Joseph Ignatius Constantine 193-195,197,200-201, 204-205 Co-Prosperity Movement 192 Cold War 7-8,118,133, 202, 247 colonial policy 17-20, 24, 29n24,
174-175 colonial system 8, 26, 252 communication network 9, 248, 259,261 Communist movement 69, 112, 180 Conroy, Tim (Taid O’Conroy) 193, 198-201, 204n7, 204n8 Constitutional Party of Political Friends (Rikkon Seiyûkai) 53 Continental Daily 50 Cossacks 138, 148, 161; Amur and Ussuri 89, 160; in Manchuria 77; in Russian Far East 87 Crawford, Douglas 199 Crimea 101 Czechoslovak legion 127 Dadongkou 254 Dagong Pao 51 Daily Mail 199, 226 Dalian 50,141, 252, 254; see also Port Arthur Damansky (Zhenbao) Island 97 Dawson, Geoffrey 226 Dazhong Hua Shengpo 51 de Valera, Éamon 199 Debuchi Katsuji 71 Democracy Movement 110, 116 Dentsü 49-50, 52-53, 55 detente 68, 126 diaspora association 158, 163 Diplomatic Review (Gaiko Jiho) 35 Dong-a Ilbo 57 Dovgalevskif, Valerian S. 71 East Asia Newspaper Conference 49 East Asia Press Conference 48-50, 52-56, 58-59, 60n6 East West News Bureau 195 Easter Rising 191,193 Egypt 125, 202
Index 267 Etorofu 96 Eurasia 91 Eurasian movement 94 Evening Standard 199 exile system (katorga} 125,148-149; see also Sakhalin penal colony extraterritorial system 260 Ezo Island 87-89,92, 97,134n3; see also Hokkaido Ezochi 87, 97 Far Eastern Republic 95, 128, 162 Ear Eastern Review 192 Fascists 116 Fengtian Province 164,167, 254, 256-257 Fenianism 192 First Opium War (1840-1842) 208 First Sino-Japanese War (1894-1895) 1, 8,123,259 First World War 1, 20, 28n9, 35,49, 211, 243; see я/ro World War One (WWI); Great War Five-Year Plan 67, 74, 78-79,130 Foreign Affairs Section 53 Foreign Ministry of Japan (Gaimushö) 192,197-198 Foreign Office 197-199, 245n9 foreign policy x, 219; British 225227, 229; Chinese 164; Japanese 65, 132, 200; Russian 132, 142,145,150; Soviet 68, 74, 114,127 Formosa 193, 201, 237, 241, 245n7; see also Taiwan Foucault, Michel 260-262 Fourteen Points 157 Free Travel system 174, 182 Furuno Inosuke 196-197 Fuse Tatsuji 175 Gallagher, Patrick 192 Gamov, I. Μ. 160-161 Genichiro Date 196 Germany 24, 77, 123, 202; Nazi 130, 133; and Russia 126-127; and USSR 77-78,107,131 Go Yeonghwan 177 Gogol, Nikolai V. 91 Golovnin, Vasily Μ. 122 Gondatti, Nikolai L. 148 Goremykin, Ivan L. 127, 241 Goro Shikoku 107-110,118,118n2 Goto Shinpei 68-70, 72, 82n3 Government-General of Korea 172-174, 181-182,186n3 Great Britain 126, 202, 206, 260; see also United Kingdom Great Depression 72, 130, 186 Great East Asia Press Convention 48, 55 Great Kantö Earthquake 182-183, 199,212 Great War (1914-1918) 6,12, 34-35, 38; see also First World War; World War One Greater East Asia Co-
Prosperity Sphere 20, 48, 106 Greater East Asia War 48 Guangdong Newspaper Association 56 Guomindang 54, 86, 216-217, 219; government 86, 215 Haguhoe 172,175-178,181 Haishenwai see Vladivostok Hakchigwang 172, 176-181, 185, 186nl Hamheung 237 Hankou 49-50, 52 Hanzawa Gyokujô 35-36, 43n6 Hara Takashi (Kei) 49-50, 198 Harbin 73,142,158,160, 252; and Chinese Eastern Railway 98, 141, 254, 261; and Chinese Imperial Maritime Customs 259; and Chinese population 147; and Cossacks 72; post office 198 Hasegawa Yoshimichi 175 Hata Shunroku 79 Hearn, Lafcadio 239 Hebei Daily 51 Heihe 157, 259; and Blagoveschchensk 158-159,163,167; Chamber of Commerce 167; Chinese banks in 161; deportation to 165; negotiation in 168nl; population in 158; refugees in 162; and Shandong native-place association 164, 167; troops in 160-162,164,167 Heilongjiang: army 76; military governor 160,164-166; Province 98, 249, 256-257,259 Herald ofAsia 56 Hikone College 199 Hilferding, Rudolf 2,19 Hiranuma Cabinet 130 Hiroshima 106-108, 118
268 Index Hirota Köki 77 Hitler, Adolf 37,43 Hobson, John A. 2-8,18, 20, 27n6, 27n7 Hokkaido Indigenous People’s School 25 Hokkaido 17, 25, 86; and Ainu 25, 87, 94,134n3; development 24; and internal colonisation 22, 27n2, 88-89, 92, 96; migration to 20; and narrative 93-94,97,99-100; and Okinawa 17, 21, 23, 27n3, 28nl7, 29n22;and USSR 101 Hong Kong 48, 51, 56-57, 206, 208,252 House of Commons 192 House of Representatives 56, 107 House of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha 235 Hsu Jabin 61nl8 Hun Ruver 252 Hunchun 108, 254 Hyeon Sangyun 176-179 Imamura Hitoshi 75 Imperial Naval Staff College 198 Imperial Press Conference 47, 58-59 Imperial Russian government 73, 88, 124,143,145, 209-210 imperial system 93,117, 262n3 Imperial Way faction {kodoha) 74 Independence movement: Indian 192; Irish 20, 27 Information Bureau, Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Gaimushö Jöhöbu) 197 Inner Mongolia 65, 98, 250 International Military Tribunal for the Far East (Tokyo Trial) 116 international network 47-48 International News Agency 196-197 International Press Congress 55, 60nl2, 60nl6 Inukai Tsuyoshi 76, 202 Ireland 20, 25,192, 200-201; Church of 192-193,196; and Civil War 195-196; as colony 17,19, 20-24, 28n21, 191, 202; migration from 18, 20; and India 21, 23, 26-27; and Japan 191,193,195, 202-203; and Korea 20; and Okinawa 27n4, 28nll, 28nl9,29n22 Irish Civil War 191,195 Irish War of Independence 21,195 Iriye, Akira 11-13 Irkutsk Chamber of Appeals 144 Irkutsk 145 Ishiwara Kanji 33, 39, 65,72, 81 Itagaki Seishirö 36, 72,107, 116 Itagaki Tadashi 107,113,116-118, 119n7,119n8,119nl0 Itö Hirobumi 196 luzhno-
Sakhalinsk see Southern Sakhalin Iwakura Mission 196 Izvol’skif, Alexander P. 144 Japan Advertiser 227 Japan Chronicle 201 Japan Mail 196 Japan Newspaper Association 50, 54-55 Japan Times 56,193,195-197 Japan Weekly Mail 193,197 Japan-British Exhibition 191, 227, 231, 244nl Japanese Army 75,108,113,119n4; and government 77; in Manchuria 129-130;and USSR 132 Japanese colonial government in Taiwan 24 Japanese Communist Party 72; and Itagaki Tadashi 107, 117; and Shii Masatsugu 114-115 Japanese Emperor 23,107, 109,113, 116,211 Japanese fleet 225, 234 Japanese Language School 25 Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs 51-54, 57, 60nl0,97,115, 211 Japanese Ministry of Home Affairs 180, 182,184 Japanese Newspaper Association (Nihon Shinbunkai) 48 Japanese Supplement (TJS) 226-233, 235-240, 243-244, 244nl Jehol Province 250 Jewish Autonomous Region 95 Jiji Shinpö 51-52 Jilin Province 108,141, 254, 259 Jilin 141, 249, 252, 256-257 Jingjing Times 50 Joffe, Adolf 69-70 Kamei Rikurö 51 Kamil, Mustafa 125 Kanokogi Kazunobu 36 Kant, Immanuel 248 Karafuto 89, 94, 100,133; see also Southern Sakhakin
Index 269 Karakhan, Lev Μ. 70 Karamzin, Nikolai Μ. 91 Katayama Sen 69 Katsura Taro 196 Kautsky, Klaus 2-3, 5-6 Kawabe, Lt. Colonel 75 Kawai Teiichi 38 Keio Gijuku 198 Keijö Imperial University 178 Keijo Nippö 56 Keith, Elizabeth 225-226, 232; and Bogaerde 241, 245n6; as illustrator 229, 234-235, 237, 240-241, 243, 245n9; technique 239-240, 243 Kerner, Robert 10 Khabarov, Erofei P. 96 Khabarovsk Krai lOlnl, 110 Khabarovsk 95, 97,116,119n7,149, 158 Khalkhin Gol see Nomohan Khitrovo, Mikhail A. 122 Kim Dong-seong 57 King Kojong (Gojong) 124 Kishi Nobusuke 79 Kita Ikki 36 Kliuchevskii, Vasilii 0.91 Kobe 207, 209 Koga Harue 234 Kokovtsov, Vladimir N. 142-143, 148 Kokumin Shinbun 56 Kokusai News Agency (Kokusai Tsüshinsha) 196 Kolchak, Aleksandr V. 127,161-162 Komsomolsk 109-110,129 Komura Jutaro 125 Kopp, Viktor L. 128 Korea Daily News 201 Korea Review 57 Korean Independence Movement 171, 191 Korean migration 172 Korean peninsula 7, 249; and Ireland 203; and Japan 23, 57,106,121; and KwantungArmy 108; and RussoJapanese confrontation 123-125,132 Korean Student Fraternity (Joseon Tuhaksaeng Haguhoe) see Haguhoe Korean War (1950-1953) 1, 8,115 Korean YMCA in Tokyo ( Chosen Kirisutokyö Seinenkai) (KYMCA) 172,175 Kravchenko, Nicholai I. 226, 238, 241-242, 244 Krivoshein, Aleksandr V. 148 Kugakusei 180-181 Kunashiri Islands 96 Kunikida Doppo 99 Kuril Islands 133; and Japan 96-97, 122-123; and Russian control 89, lOlnl, 134nl; and Sakhalin 88-89, 93,96-97,100,122-123,133 Kurils see Kuril Islands Kuropatkin, Aleksei N. 67, 138 Kwangmu Emperor 7 KwantungArmy 106; intelligence officer in
107, 113; and Itagaki Seishiro 116; and Kishi Nobosuke 79; in Manchuria 75, 108; in Sino-Soviet conflict 73; and USSR 75-76, 78,129; 3rd Area Army 108,113 Kyongjin Times 50 (Japanese) Labour Movement 69 labour migration 182 Lamsdorf, Vladimir N. 144 Le Bon, Gustave 38-39 League of Mongols 250 League of Nations Commission of Enquiry 250 League of Nations 5; Chinese delegation in 96; in Geneva 197, 199; and Japan 38, 200; and Lytton Commission 88; and press 58, 61n23; and Washington Conference 41 Lenin, Vladimir I. 2-6, 18-20, 27n6, 27n9 Liang Shanding 99 Liang Yuzhi 51 Liaodong Peninsula 123, 125, 141, 254 Liberal Democratic Party of Japan 107, 117 Litvinov, Maksim Μ. 76-78 London 21, 47, 58,124-126, 194,200 London Naval Treaty 78 Lytton Commission 88, 197 Maedagawa Koichiro 58 Maizuru 111, 115 Makino Nobuaki 194 Maklakov, Vasilii A. 235 Manchu 157, 208, 248, 257, 260 Manchukuo 252; and Chinese Eastern Railway 129; economy of 79; frontier 217; governmentality in 262nl2; identity 89; and Japan 78, 94, 98;
270 Index and museum 100; puppet state 39, 65, 129; relations with 216; Soviet interference in 66 Manchuria 12, 86,138, 247-248, 252 and Chinese Eastern Railway (CER) 124-125,128,139-140,143-144, 252, 259-261; Chinese Imperial Maritime Customs in 257-259; as contested territory 100; Japan’s annexation of 32-33, 36, 41, 43, 100; Japan’s occupation of 100, 126, 129, 132-133, 217; Japanese expansionism in 18-19, 71-72, 159, 254; and Korea 125-126, 193, 195; Kwantung Army in 108,129; and League of Nations 96; Lytton Commission in 197; as Manzhou 97-98; and Mongolia 36, 65, 72, 74; Nicholai I. Kravchenko in 238; and press 48-50, 77; population in 88-90, 94, 209, 260; rebellion in 157; Red Army in 106, 108, 131; representation of 99; resources in 32, 40; and Russia 126; Russian development of 141-144,147, 149-150; Russian expansion in 138, 144-145,148, 254; Russian occupation of 124, 140; RussoJapanese Agreement on 257, 261; Russo-Japanese War in 214; and USSR 73, 75-77, 79; and World War One 146,150; and Zhang Xueliang 73; and Zhang Zuolin 167 Manchurian Incident 34, 67; and League of Nations 197; and Manchukuo 65; and media 49; in Pravda 77·, and USSR 75-76, 78 Manifest Destiny Doctrine 101 Manzhouli 161, 254, 259, 261 March First Movement 172-173; and Independence Declaration 175; and Free Travel System 182; and labourers 185; and nationalism 178; and socialism 186; and students 175, 178,180-182,184,186n3 Maritime Province 123,145,158, 254; see also Primorski! Krai Masao Nakajima 51 Matsumae domain 92, 134nl Matsuoka Yosuke 34,197 May 4th (1919) Movement 49 media network 47,
192 Meiji government 89,126 Meiji reform 123, 126 Meiji Restoration 67, 95, 106, 240; and Hokkaido 22, 25; and Kuril Islands 96; and overseas empire 159 Mein Kampf 37 Merivale, Herman 19 migration factor 207, 211, 218 migration flow 207, 213, 218 migration process 209, 213-215 militarisation 124, 132 militarism 5-7; German 38; Japanese 18, 38-39,107,110,116,234 militarist 72-73,110,112-113,116 Millard, Thomas 54, 56,197 Minobe Tatsukichi 174 Mitsukawa Kametarö 36 Mitsunaga Hoshirö 49-50, 52-53, 59 Mitsuo Hiratsuka 110 Molotov, Vyacheslav Μ. 130 Mongolia 11-12, 121, 256; fighting in 130, 132; independence of 101; Inner 98; and Manchuria 36, 65, 72, 74; and Russia 126,128; RussoJapanese secret agreement 256; Stalin on 77; and USSR 75, 78, 81,129 Mongols 260 Monroe Doctrine 35 Mori Hachijütarö 196 Moscow 69, 76-78, 90,116,198, 215; authorities 73; expansion 86; government 70-71, 74-75, 77, 128-132; leadership 68; strategy 66; in World War Two 133 Motoyama Hikoichi 49-50 Mukden Incident 39, 78 Mukden 67, 77,141, 252, 254; see also Shenyang 77,100, 252 Mukhin, F.M. 100-161 Murav’ev-Amurskil, Nikolai N. 87 Murofuse Koshin 37 Mutual Assistance Protocol 78 Nagasaki 106, 134nl, 207 Nagata Tetsuzan 32-33, 36, 41-43 Nagoya 52 Nakhodka 109-111,114 Кanfang Daily 50 Nanjing 49-50, 52, 77,100 Nara 184 National Manchukuo Central Museum 100 National Safety Forces 114 National Union of Journalist in China 54
Index 271 nationalism 5, 8, 101; Chinese 40, 129, 219; in empires 85; Irish 27,193; Iriye Akira on 11; in Japan 72, 81; Japanese journalists on 59; Komei Rikurö on 51; and Koreans 172-175,180-182; and March First movement 178; Russian 86,91,93 nationalist movement 125,175 nationalization 216 Nazi 34; -- Germany 130, 133 Nehru, Jawaharlal 125 network analysis 9 network infrastructure 259, 261 news agency 57,197 newspaper industry 49, 55, 59 Newspaper Law 50 Nichi-Bei 56 Nicholas II 137-139, 238, 244n2 Nikolaevsk Incident 69-71, 82n4 Nippon Shinbun 109-110 Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Company 49 Nitobe Inazô 18, 24,29n24 Niuzhuang 259 Nomonhan 81, 129-130, 133 Non-Aggression Pact 66, 71-72, 74, 77, 129-130; see also Soviet-Japanese Neutrality Pact Nonni River 254 North-China Herald 194 Northcliffe, Alfred H. 226, 245n6 Northern Sakhalin 67, 69-71, 82n4, 101,128,149 Northern Territories 97, lOlnl Occupation Forces 111, 115 October Revolution see Russian Revolution of 1917 Odessa 87 Okawa Shümei 36, 192 Okinawa: as colony 28nl7; education in 25; emigrants from 18,25; as independent kingdom 87; and Ireland 27n4; Japanese culture on 23; and Hokkaido 17, 21, 23, 27n2, 27n3, 29n22; prefecture 97,123 Okuma Shigenobu 214, 227 Opium Wars 137 Oriental News Agency 53 Osaka Mainichi Shinbun 49-50, 56 Osaka 49, 52,184 Ouchi Hyöe 19 Pacific Fleet 129 Pacific Squadron 149 Pacific War 8, 43,106,133 Pan Dingxin 50 Pan-Asianism 74,94 Pan-Asianist movement 192 Pan-Asianists 36 Pan-Pacific International Exposition 55 Pan-Pacific Newspaper Congress 56 Pan-Slavism 238 Paris Peace Conference 197;
see also Versailles Pearl Harbor 131 Peking Institute of Fine Arts 239 People’s Republic of China (PRC) 93,217 Perdue, Peter C. 9-10,12, 91, 93 Peter the Great 90-91,122 Petrograd 127 Petropavlovsk 149, 238 Philippines 25,48, 56, 237 Pokotilov, Dmitriï D. 144 Port Arthur 124,139-141,195, 238, 252; see also Dalian Portsmouth Peace Conference 125, 140-141 Portsmouth Peace Treaty 140-141, 255,257 Portsmouth, USA 71, 88,196 possession 86-87,92-93, 95-98, 101,125 Potsdam Declaration 109, 131 Pratt, John 199 Pravda 77, 80 Priamur region see Primorski Krai Primorski District see Primorski! Krai Primorskii Krai 98, lOlnl, 123, 145; see also Maritime Province prisoner of war (POW) 109, 111, 113 Prokopovich, Feofan P. 91 public opinion 47, 53, 203 puppet state 39, 65,129 Pusan 50 Qing: and Boxers 157; conquest by 91-92; dynasty 23,41, 66, 87, 93, 207; empire 86, 90,123, 207, 257; as foreign rule 41, 85, 87, 93, 98; on Manchuria 88, 96, 257; and Russia 97, 144, 157, 209; and ‘unequal treaties’ 159 Qingdao 50 Qiqihar 75, 254
272 Index railway network 254 Red Army 132; and Chinese recruits 162, 215; and Goro Shikoku 108; in Manchuria 106,108; in Sakhalin 99; and Shii Masatsugu 113 Republic of China (RoC) 48-49, 51, 93, 216-217,262 Resident-General of Korea 24 Reuters 49, 196-198 Review of the Far East 54 Revolution of 1905 66,124,141, 191 Revolution of February 1917 127, 162,229 Russian Revolution of 1917 94-95, 132; in Blagoveschchensk 163, 167; and British government 235; and Chinese community in Russia 210, 214-215, 219; and Chinese Eastern Railway (CER) 79; and Japan 66-68, 80; in Northeast Asia 127; and Siberia Intervention 68; and Soviet foreign policy 128; in The Times 238 revolutionary movement 128-129 Ribbentrop, Joachim von 130 Romanov 85, 235 Roosevelt, Franklin D. 131 Russian Baltic Fleet 67 Russian Civil War 101; and Blagoveshchensk 163; and Boxer Rebellion 165; and China 159, 215; and Far Eastern Republics 95; and Japan’s intervention in 127; and October Revolution 219 Russian Geographical Society 141 Russian Ministry of Finance 142-144, 149 Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs 122, 144, 212 Russian Ministry of Internal Affairs 148 Russian Orthodox Church 91, 238 Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (RSFSR) 95 Russian State Bank 143 Russian Supplement (TRS) 225-227, 229, 235-236,238,241-244, 244n3 Russification 85 Russo-Chinese Bank 143 Russo-Chinese Treaty (1896) 140 Russo-Japanese relations 121 Russo-Japanese War (1904-1905) 1,11, 23, 47, 49, 214, 255; and Chinese Eastern Railway (CER) 140; and Chinese migration 219; and Japanese fleet in 234; and Japanese supremacy 67,
132; and Nicholai I. Kravchenko on 238; and Northeast Asia 125; and reportage on 234; and Revolution of 1905 124; and Russian authority 144; and Russian defeat 149, 225; and Russian elite 141 Ryukyu Islands 22 Ryükyü Kingdom 23, 25, 28nl7, 97 Saint Petersburg 148, 255 Saito Makoto 175,182 Sakhalin Museum of Regional Ethnography 99 Sakhalin penal colony 125, 138-139, 148-149; see also exile system Sakhalin 95-97, lOlnl, 133,139; Bolshevik government and Japan on 128; and discovery 93; literature on 98; and memory 99; population of 88-89; and Russian control of 123, 125; see also Northern Sakhalin; Southern Sakhalin Sakuzö Yoshino 174-175 Sanxing 259 Sapporo Agricultural College 24 Sato Masajirö 36 Sazonov, Sergei D. 127 Schumpeter, Joseph A. 19, 43nl Sea of Japan 254 Second Opium War (1856-1860) 259 Second Sino-Japanese War (1937-1945) 1,100,216,219 Second World War (1939-1945) 1, 28nll, 81,100, 217; see also World War Two Seikanron (conquering Korea) 23 self-sufficiency 32-33, 40-41, 43, 235; see also autarky Semenov, Grigori! Μ. 161, 167 Seoul Press 56 September 18th History Museum 100 Sering, Max 24 Shanghai: and Chinese emigration 208; and Far Eastern Review 192; and Hsu Jabin 61nl8; and journalism 54-56; and ‘malcontent Koreans’ 184; and newspapers 49-53; and Wang Kuochun Penn 61nl8 Shanghai Daily 51 Shanghai Newspaper Association 56 Shaw, G. L 192 Shaw, George Bernard 199
Index 273 Shen Bao 51, 56, 61nl8 Shenyang 77,100, 252; see also Mukden Shenzhou Daily 51 Shibusawa Eiichi 196-197 Shidehara Kijürö 38, 70, 72, 74 Shii Masato 113,119n4 Shii Masatsugu 107, 111-118, 119n5 Shikoku Gorö 107-109,118,118n2 Sholokhov, Mikhail A. 79 Shöwa Emperor 36 Shuntian Times 51 Siam 48,101 Siberian Intervention 67-68, 159, 231 Siberian military flotilla 149 Sino-Soviet Treaty 73 Smith, Anthony 19, 86 Social Darwinism 32-39, 41—43,43n8, 44nll Socialism 38, 66, 79, 112, 172, 181; and Five Year Plan 130; literature on 3; and March First Movement 186; Soviet 107 Society of Korean Education 178 Solov’ev, Sergei A. 91 Song Yuntong 164 Songhua River 141, 252, 254 South Africa 18, 20, 47 South China Morning Post 57 South Manchuria Railway (Μantetsu) (SMR): and Chinese Eastern Railway (CER) 252, 254, 261; and Japan 125, 141, 256; and Kwantung Army 75, 78; and Russia 125,141 South Sea 18-19, 25, 28nl7, 29n26,49 South Seas 28nl7, 49 Southern Sakhalin 97, 99-100,125, 133; see also Karafuto Soviet government: and Chinese Eastern Railway (CER) 80; and Chinese migration 115-116; and Chinese government 79; and Japan 127, 132; and Neutrality Pact 131; on peace policy 76; and POWs 107, 114; Itagaki Tadashi on 116 Soviet Ministry of Internal Affairs 119n5 Soviet-Japanese Basic 71, 128 Soviet-Japanese Neutrality Pact see Non-Aggression Pact Soviet-Japanese relations 66, 70,131 Soviet-Japanese War 107, 121, 133 Soviet-Japanese Neutrality Pact 81, 106,130 Spencer, Herbert 34 Stalin, Josef 8, 80, 119n6; on China 101; and Five-Year Plan 79; Goro Shikoku on 110; on Japan x-xi, 77-78;
and POWs 108; on Sakhalin and Kuril Islands 89; and USSR 130; and Yalta Agreement 131 Stalingrad 131 Starr, Frederick 201 state borders 12, 137 State Duma 89,124,142,145 Steed, Wickham 226 Stolypin, Piotr A. 89, 145-149 Stone, Melville E. 196-197 struggle for survival (seizon kyôso) 34-35, 38,40-42 student migration 174,182, 214 Sugimura Kôtarô 49, 56-57, 60nl5-60nl6 Suifenhe 254, 259, 261 Sun Yat-sen 125,128, 202 Suntian Times 51 survival of the fittest (shizen töta) 34-36, 38,41 Suzuki Seisetsu 56 Taipei 50, 217 Taisho Democracy 174 Taisho era 49 Taiwan 227; civilian administration of 69; and East Asia Press Conference 50; expedition to 123; and First Sino-Japanese War 22; Japanese control on 49; as Japanese territory 18; and Korea 26, 29n26; migration to 25; Yanaihara Tadao on 19; see also Formosa Takamine Jokichi 194-195 Takaoka Kumao 24 Tanaka Giichi 68, 71 Tanaka Kunishige 39 Tanaka Memorandum 71 Tanaka Ryükichi 36 Tashkent 88,140 Tatishchev, Vasiliï N. 90 telegraphic network 58 Temporary Development School 25 Thailand see Siam The North China Star 56 Tianjin Daily 51 Tianjin Social Welfare Daily (Yishibao) 56 Tianjin 50-51 Tibet 101
274 Index Togo Minoru 24 Togo Shigenori 131 Tôjô Hideki 36 Tokugawa shogunate 207 Tokutomi Soho 35, 56, 60nl5,134n4 Tokyo Asahi Shimbun 56 Tokyo Imperial University 18, 21, 29n21, 34, 37 Tokyo Normal School 34 Tolstoy, Lev N. 111,238 Tondenhei 89 Tong, Hollington 54-57 Toyama Mitsuru 192 Toyohara 97 Tran-Siberian Railway: construction of 87, 89,137,139,158; financing of 143; as rail network 140; travelling on 76 Treaty of Aigun 157-159,164, 166, 208 Treaty of Beijing (1860) 208 Treaty of Friendship and Trade 208-209 Treaty of Nerchinsk 97,125, 208 Treaty of Portsmouth (1905) 71, 140-141, 255, 257; proposed 71, 76 Treaty of Saint Petersburg (1875) 123, 125 Treaty of Shimonoseki (1895) 123 treaty ports 3, 250, 252, 257-259,261 Trinity College 25,196 Triple Intervention (sangoku kansho) 79, 123,134n4 Troianovskiï, Aleksandr 71 Tsushima 67, 92 Tumen River 254 Turkestan 140 Turkey 77,125 Uchimura Kanzö 18, 29n24 Uehara Etsujirö 56 Uesugi Shinkichi 37, 43n8 ukiyo-e 227,239 Union of South Africa 47 United Kingdom 13, 22-23, 58, 192, 241, 249; see also Great Britain University of Missouri 55, 59 University of Tokyo 18-19 Ural Mountain see Urals Urals 76, 90,145 Ussuri Mountain 88 Ussuri Railway 142 Ussuri River 122, 261 Ussuri region see Ussurüskiï Krai Ussuriïskiï Krai 87-88, 101, 208 Valuev, Petr A. 88 Bogaerde, Ulric van den 225-226, 235, 241-242, 244, 245n6 Versailles 197-198 Vietnam 125 Vladivostok 90, 96,123,158,161; Allied military headquarter in 165; Chinese in 216; and Chinese Eastern Railway (CER) 139, 144; migration to 87; shipping from 166; trade in 158 Volunteer Fleet
87 Voroshilov, Kliment E. 77 Waj inchi 97 Wakefield, Edward G. 19 Wallace, Donald Mackenzie 229, 235, 244n2 war criminal 107,109,116,119n7 war indemnity 2, 123, 196 War of Resistance against Japan see Second Sino-Japanese War (1937-1945) Washington Conference 39, 41, 129, 232 Washington 39,126-127 Watanabe Shôzaburô 239 Williams, Walter 55-57, 59 Wilson, T. Woodrow 175 Witte, Sergei lu. 88, 125,138, 142,261 World Press Congress 56-58, 60nl3, 60nl6 World War One (WWI) 3-6, 41,127, 132, 226, 229; and Social Darwinism 34-35; see also First World War; Great War World War Two (WWII) 2, 6, 8, 11, 132-133 world security 6 Wu Yingtu 53 Wu Yuanyuan 52 Xinhai Revolution of 1911 95,126,150; and the Chinese Imperial Maritime Customs 262nll; Chinese students in Japan 214; and nationalism 219; and newspapers 50 Xingmintin 141 Xinjiang 101, 140 Ximvenbao 51 Xiong Shaohao 50-51 Xu Li-Qui 48
Index 275 Yalta Agreement 131, 133 Yamagata Aritomo 35 Yamagata Isö 56 Yanaihara Tadao 17-21, 23-24, 27, 193,203 Yang Hongyu 164 Yasuhito, Prince Chichibu 36 Yellow Sea 252, 254, 257, 261 Yi Bong-chang 184 Yi Gwangsu 175 Ύϊ Shi Bao 51 Yitong River 252 Yokohama 193, 197, 207, 209, 212 Yokoi Tokiyoshi 37 Yoshida Shigeru 114 Yoshino Sakuzô 174-175 Yoshizawa Kenkichi 70, 76-77 Yun Bong-gil 184 zainichi scholar 173-174 Zhang Shouzeng 160 Zhang Xueliang 73 Zhang Zuolin 128,167 Zhonghua. Xinbao 51,53 Zumoto Motosada 56,195 |
any_adam_object | 1 |
author2 | De Angeli, Aglaia 1975- Robinson, Peter 1953- O'Connor, Peter Reisz, Emma Reiko, Tsuchiya |
author2_role | edt edt edt edt edt |
author2_variant | a a d aa aad p r pr p o po e r er t r tr |
author_GND | (DE-588)1337523321 (DE-588)128405635 |
author_facet | De Angeli, Aglaia 1975- Robinson, Peter 1953- O'Connor, Peter Reisz, Emma Reiko, Tsuchiya |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV049804516 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)1414400106 (DE-599)BVBBV049804516 |
era | Geschichte 1894-1953 gnd |
era_facet | Geschichte 1894-1953 |
format | Book |
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genre | (DE-588)4143413-4 Aufsatzsammlung gnd-content |
genre_facet | Aufsatzsammlung |
geographic | Asien Nordost (DE-588)4389247-4 gnd Sowjetunion (DE-588)4077548-3 gnd Russland (DE-588)4076899-5 gnd |
geographic_facet | Asien Nordost Sowjetunion Russland |
id | DE-604.BV049804516 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-12-09T17:02:46Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780367648237 9780367648244 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-035145058 |
oclc_num | 1414400106 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-12 |
owner_facet | DE-12 |
physical | xi, 275 Seiten Illustrationen, Karten |
psigel | BSB_NED_20241203 |
publishDate | 2024 |
publishDateSearch | 2024 |
publishDateSort | 2024 |
publisher | Routledge |
record_format | marc |
series | Routledge studies in the modern history of Asia |
series2 | Routledge studies in the modern history of Asia |
spelling | Competing imperialisms in Northeast Asia new perspectives, 1894-1953 edited by Aglaia De Angeli, Peter Robinson, Peter O'Connor, Emma Reisz, and Tsuchiya Reiko London ; New York Routledge 2024 xi, 275 Seiten Illustrationen, Karten txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Routledge studies in the modern history of Asia 183 "In the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries, the states of Japan, China and both Tsarist Russia and later the USSR, vied for imperial dominance in Northeast Asia. In the process, they contested and at the same time adopted, many of the physical and rhetorical features of Old-World imperialism, mitigated by domestic political forces and deeply ingrained cultural and historical values. With chapters written by scholars from Europe and Asia, including Russia, this book offers an international and interdisciplinary perspective on the competing imperialisms in Northeast Asia in the period 1894-1953, exploring the encounters between old rivals and new protagonists. Bringing together specialists from different disciplines and drawing on newly-discovered and hard-to-access sources, it presents a uniquely comparative and holistic perspective on the symbiotic relationships of these regional powers and resistance to them. The contributors focus on four key areas - ideology, rivalry and territoriality, social factors, and visual representations. A valuable resource for students and scholars of modern Northeast-Asian history, and highly pertinent to understanding the imperial posturing between some of the same protagonists today." Geschichte 1894-1953 gnd rswk-swf Imperialismus (DE-588)4026651-5 gnd rswk-swf Asien Nordost (DE-588)4389247-4 gnd rswk-swf Sowjetunion (DE-588)4077548-3 gnd rswk-swf Russland (DE-588)4076899-5 gnd rswk-swf East Asia / Foreign relations / 20th century Imperialism Russia / Foreign relations / East Asia Soviet Union / Foreign relations / East Asia Japan / Foreign relations / 20th century China / Foreign relations / 20th century Diplomatic relations China East Asia Japan Russia Soviet Union 1900-1999 (DE-588)4143413-4 Aufsatzsammlung gnd-content Asien Nordost (DE-588)4389247-4 g Russland (DE-588)4076899-5 g Sowjetunion (DE-588)4077548-3 g Imperialismus (DE-588)4026651-5 s Geschichte 1894-1953 z DE-604 De Angeli, Aglaia 1975- (DE-588)1337523321 edt Robinson, Peter 1953- (DE-588)128405635 edt O'Connor, Peter edt Reisz, Emma edt Reiko, Tsuchiya edt Äquivalent Druck-Ausgabe, Paperback Äquivalent Druck-Ausgabe, Paperback 9780367648244 Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe 9781003126430 Routledge studies in the modern history of Asia 183 (DE-604)BV012703327 183 Digitalisierung BSB München - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=035145058&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis Digitalisierung BSB München - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=035145058&sequence=000003&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Register // Gemischte Register |
spellingShingle | Competing imperialisms in Northeast Asia new perspectives, 1894-1953 Routledge studies in the modern history of Asia Imperialismus (DE-588)4026651-5 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4026651-5 (DE-588)4389247-4 (DE-588)4077548-3 (DE-588)4076899-5 (DE-588)4143413-4 |
title | Competing imperialisms in Northeast Asia new perspectives, 1894-1953 |
title_auth | Competing imperialisms in Northeast Asia new perspectives, 1894-1953 |
title_exact_search | Competing imperialisms in Northeast Asia new perspectives, 1894-1953 |
title_full | Competing imperialisms in Northeast Asia new perspectives, 1894-1953 edited by Aglaia De Angeli, Peter Robinson, Peter O'Connor, Emma Reisz, and Tsuchiya Reiko |
title_fullStr | Competing imperialisms in Northeast Asia new perspectives, 1894-1953 edited by Aglaia De Angeli, Peter Robinson, Peter O'Connor, Emma Reisz, and Tsuchiya Reiko |
title_full_unstemmed | Competing imperialisms in Northeast Asia new perspectives, 1894-1953 edited by Aglaia De Angeli, Peter Robinson, Peter O'Connor, Emma Reisz, and Tsuchiya Reiko |
title_short | Competing imperialisms in Northeast Asia |
title_sort | competing imperialisms in northeast asia new perspectives 1894 1953 |
title_sub | new perspectives, 1894-1953 |
topic | Imperialismus (DE-588)4026651-5 gnd |
topic_facet | Imperialismus Asien Nordost Sowjetunion Russland Aufsatzsammlung |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=035145058&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=035145058&sequence=000003&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV012703327 |
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