En savoir plus
Informationen zum Autor Sven Saaler is professor of modern Japanese history at Sophia University, Tokyo. Christopher W. A. Szpilman is professor of modern Japanese history at Teikyo University, Tokyo. Klappentext Pan-Asianism has been an ideal of Asian solidarity, regional cooperation, and regional integration but also served to justify expansionism and aggression. As such, it has been a decisive factor in the history of Asia and the Pacific region. This groundbreaking collection brings seminal documents on Pan-Asianism to the Western reader for the first time. It includes some forty primary sources from the 1920s to the present. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction: The Emergence of Pan-Asianism as an Ideal of Asian Identity and Solidarity, 1850-2008 Sven Saaler and Christopher W. A. Szpilman Part I: The Radicalization of Japanese Pan-Asianism and Intra-Asian Disputes, 1920-1930 Chapter 1: Nakano Seigo: Populist, Fascist, Pan-Asianist, 1917-1942 Stefano von Loë Chapter 2: The Yuzonsha's "War Cry," 1920 Christopher W. A. Szpilman Chapter 3: Japan, Korea, and Pan-Asianism: The Dokokai, 1921 Sven Saaler Chapter 4: Okawa Shumei: "Various Problems of Asia in Revival," 1922 Christopher W. A. Szpilman Chapter 5: Sun Yat-sen: "Pan-Asianism," 1924 Roger H. Brown Chapter 6: Tanaka Ippei: "Islam and Pan-Asianism," 1924 Eddy Dufourmont Chapter 7: The Greater India Society: Indian Culture and an Asian Federation Brij Tankha Chapter 8: The Pan-Asiatic Society and the "Conference of Asian Peoples" in Nagasaki, 1926 Sven Saaler Chapter 9: Raja Mahendra Pratap: Indian Independence, Asian Solidarity, World Federation, 1930 Sven Saaler Part II: Pan-Asian