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Demarcating Japan: Imperialism, Islanders, and Mobility, 1855–1884
Harvard University Press, 2023 Cloth: 978-0-674-29138-6 Library of Congress Classification JZ1745.Y365 2023 Dewey Decimal Classification 327.52
ABOUT THIS BOOK
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Histories of remote islands around Japan are usually told through the prism of territorial disputes. In contrast, Takahiro Yamamoto contends that the transformation of the islands from ambiguous border zones to a territorialized space emerged out of multilateral power relations. Sakhalin, the Kuril Islands, Tsushima, the Bonin Islands, and the Ryukyu Islands became the subject of inter-imperial negotiations during the formative years of modern Japan as empires nudged each other to secure their status with minimal costs rather than fighting a territorial scramble. Based on multiarchival, multilingual research, Demarcating Japan argues that the transformation of border islands should be understood as an interconnected process, where inter-local referencing played a key role in the outcome: Japan’s geographical expansion in the face of domineering Extra-Asian empires. See other books on: 1600-1868 | Boundaries | Historical Geography | Imperialism | Maritime History & Piracy See other titles from Harvard University Press |
Nearby on shelf for International relations / Scope of international relations. Political theory. Diplomacy / Scope of international relations with regard to countries, territories, regions, etc.:
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