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Journal of Japanese Studies | 1985

The Japanese Colonial Empire:1895-1945

Ramon H. Myers; Mark R. Peattie; 張漢裕; Han-Yu Chang

CIRCUMSTANCES AND MOTIVATIONS Japans rise as a colonial power stands as an anomaly in the history of modern imperialism, one that can be understood only in the context of Japans historical and geographic circumstances and the world events in the latter half of the nineteenth century. Launched in the high noon of the “new imperialism,” the Japanese colonial empire was to a large extent formally patterned after the tropical empires of modern Europe. Yet, as the only non-Western imperium of modern times, Japans overseas empire stood apart from its European counterparts, its circumstances scarcely duplicated elsewhere. The first and most arresting aspect of the Japanese empire is the fact that the metropolitan homeland itself only narrowly escaped colonial subjugation, surviving as one of the four Asian nations (along with China, Siam, and Korea) to escape obliteration in the flood of Western dominance in the nineteenth century. As it was, Japans emergence as a colonial power in the late 1890s came just as the nation was extricating itself from the unequal treaty system imposed three decades earlier by the Western powers. The reasons for this remarkable phenomenon– the pull of other Asian opportunities on aggressive Western energies at mid-century and the revolutionary transformation of Japan from a weak, feudal, and agrarian country into a modern industrial power economically and militarily capable of resisting foreign domination– have been so extensively explored in this and other histories that they need no repetition here. What does require reemphasis is that both historical timing and an overriding concern for national security were basic to the initial direction of Japanese expansion.


Journal of Japanese Studies | 1996

Japan's first modern war : army and society in the conflict with China, 1894-95

Mark R. Peattie; Stewart Lone

Acknowledgements - Abbreviations - Introduction - The Origins of War: Japan, the Army, and East Asia - Wartime Strategy and Diplomacy: Questions of Unity - The Soldiers Experience - The Home Front: Mobilising Support - The Home Front: Patriotism, Profit and Loss - Novice Imperialist: Occupation Policies in Korea and Manchuria - Discipline and Control: The Army as Civilisation - Wartime Strategy and Diplomacy: Closing the War - Conclusion - Index


Archive | 1992

Nan'yō: The Rise and Fall of the Japanese in Micronesia, 1885-1945

Mark R. Peattie


Monumenta Nipponica | 1990

The Japanese Informal Empire in China, 1895-1937

Peter Duus; Ramon H. Myers; Mark R. Peattie


Journal of Japanese Studies | 1997

The Japanese wartime empire, 1931-1945

Akira Iriye; Peter Duus; Ramon H. Myers; Mark R. Peattie


The American Historical Review | 1976

Ishiwara Kanji and Japan's Confrontation with the West

Joyce C. Lebra; Mark R. Peattie


Archive | 2011

The battle for China : essays on the military history of the Sino-Japanese War of 1937-1945

Mark R. Peattie; Edward J. Drea; Hans van de Ven


Archive | 1991

Introduction. Japan's Informal Empire in China, 1895-1937: An Overview

Peter Duus; Ramon H. Myers; Mark R. Peattie


The Journal of Asian Studies | 2003

Sunburst: The Rise of Japanese Naval Air Power, 1909-1941

Theodore F. Cook; Mark R. Peattie


Journal of Japanese Studies | 1995

Japan and Britain in Shanghai, 1925–31

Mark R. Peattie; Harumi Goto-Shibata

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Joyce C. Lebra

University of Colorado Boulder

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Warren I. Cohen

Michigan State University

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