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Significant Soil: Settler Colonialism and Japan's Urban Empire in Manchuria
Harvard University Press, 2015 Cloth: 978-0-674-50433-2 Library of Congress Classification DS796.D3O38 2015 Dewey Decimal Classification 951.82
ABOUT THIS BOOK
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Like all empires, Japan’s prewar empire encompassed diverse territories as well as a variety of political forms for governing such spaces. This book focuses on Japan’s Kwantung Leasehold and Railway Zone in China’s three northeastern provinces. The hybrid nature of the leasehold’s political status vis-à-vis the metropole, the presence of the semipublic and enormously powerful South Manchuria Railway Company, and the region’s vulnerability to inter-imperial rivalries, intra-imperial competition, and Chinese nationalism throughout the first decades of the twentieth century combined to give rise to a distinctive type of settler politics. Settlers sought inclusion within a broad Japanese imperial sphere while successfully utilizing the continental space as a site for political and social innovation. See other books on: Colonists | Imperialism | Japanese | Manchuria | Manchuria (China) See other titles from Harvard University Press |
Nearby on shelf for History of Asia / China / Local history and description:
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