Wellcome

Contested memories in Chinese and Japanese foreign policy / Matteo Dian.

By: Dian, Matteo [author.]Material type: TextTextSeries: Asian studies seriesPublisher: Amsterdam : Elsevier, 2017Description: 1 online resourceContent type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9780081020289; 0081020287Subject(s): Sino-Japanese War (1937-1945) | World War (1939-1945) | Nationalism and collective memory -- China | Nationalism and collective memory -- Japan | World War, 1939-1945 -- Influence | Sino-Japanese War, 1937-1945 -- Influence | China -- Foreign relations -- 1949- | Japan -- Foreign relations -- 1945- | POLITICAL SCIENCE -- Government -- International | POLITICAL SCIENCE -- International Relations -- General | Diplomatic relations | Influence (Literary, artistic, etc.) | Nationalism and collective memory | China | Japan | Since 1937Genre/Form: Electronic books.Additional physical formats: Print version :: No titleDDC classification: 327.51 LOC classification: DS777.8Online resources: ScienceDirect
Contents:
Front Cover -- Contested Memories in Chinese and Japanese Foreign Policy -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Timeline of the Events -- 1 Theorizing the Role of Collective Memory in International Politics -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 Memory, History, and the Idea of "Usable Past" -- 1.2.1 Instrumentalism -- 1.2.2 Historical Determinism -- 1.2.3 Culturalist Approaches -- 1.3 Remembering, Forgetting, Censoring, and Foreign Policy -- 1.4 Memory and the Interpretive Approach -- 1.5 Outline of the Book -- 2 Japan's Memory During the Postwar Period (1945-1989) -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Japanese Victims and the American Wedge -- 2.3 The Conservative Tradition -- 2.4 The Japanese Left and the Postwar Antimilitarism -- 2.5 The Yoshida Doctrine between Strategy and Memory -- 2.6 The Vietnam War and the Opening to China -- 2.7 The Rise of Neo-Conservatives -- 2.8 Conclusion -- 3 The Battle of Memory in the Heisei Era -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 The End of Sh�owa as Dilemma -- 3.3 The First Progressive Interlude -- 3.4 The Conservative Backlash and the Normalization of Japan -- 3.5 The Democratic Party of Japan and the Second Progressive Interlude -- 3.6 Abe Shinz�o and the End of the Postwar Regime -- 3.7 Conclusion -- 4 China's Collective Memory between the Revolution and Tiananmen Square -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 The Tradition of National Salvation -- 4.3 Class Struggle, the Victor Narrative and the Good Japanese -- 4.4 Collective Memory and Foreign Policy in the Maoist period -- 4.5 Deng and the Reversal of Verdicts on China's Past -- 4.6 Deng's China: Toward Modernity, Wealth, and Power -- 4.7 Conclusion -- 5 Collective Memory and Foreign-Policy in China after the Cold War -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 Tiananmen Square and the Dilemmas of 1989 -- 5.3 Patriotic Education and the Return of the Century of Humiliation -- 5.4 Memories of Mao.
5.5 Japan as a Chosen Trauma -- 5.6 The Reevaluation of the Kuomintang -- 5.7 The Return of Confucius -- 5.8 China's Foreign Policy Between Humiliation and Harmony -- 5.9 Conclusion -- 6 Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Index -- Back Cover.
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Includes bibliographical references and index.

Front Cover -- Contested Memories in Chinese and Japanese Foreign Policy -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Timeline of the Events -- 1 Theorizing the Role of Collective Memory in International Politics -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 Memory, History, and the Idea of "Usable Past" -- 1.2.1 Instrumentalism -- 1.2.2 Historical Determinism -- 1.2.3 Culturalist Approaches -- 1.3 Remembering, Forgetting, Censoring, and Foreign Policy -- 1.4 Memory and the Interpretive Approach -- 1.5 Outline of the Book -- 2 Japan's Memory During the Postwar Period (1945-1989) -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Japanese Victims and the American Wedge -- 2.3 The Conservative Tradition -- 2.4 The Japanese Left and the Postwar Antimilitarism -- 2.5 The Yoshida Doctrine between Strategy and Memory -- 2.6 The Vietnam War and the Opening to China -- 2.7 The Rise of Neo-Conservatives -- 2.8 Conclusion -- 3 The Battle of Memory in the Heisei Era -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 The End of Sh�owa as Dilemma -- 3.3 The First Progressive Interlude -- 3.4 The Conservative Backlash and the Normalization of Japan -- 3.5 The Democratic Party of Japan and the Second Progressive Interlude -- 3.6 Abe Shinz�o and the End of the Postwar Regime -- 3.7 Conclusion -- 4 China's Collective Memory between the Revolution and Tiananmen Square -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 The Tradition of National Salvation -- 4.3 Class Struggle, the Victor Narrative and the Good Japanese -- 4.4 Collective Memory and Foreign Policy in the Maoist period -- 4.5 Deng and the Reversal of Verdicts on China's Past -- 4.6 Deng's China: Toward Modernity, Wealth, and Power -- 4.7 Conclusion -- 5 Collective Memory and Foreign-Policy in China after the Cold War -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 Tiananmen Square and the Dilemmas of 1989 -- 5.3 Patriotic Education and the Return of the Century of Humiliation -- 5.4 Memories of Mao.

5.5 Japan as a Chosen Trauma -- 5.6 The Reevaluation of the Kuomintang -- 5.7 The Return of Confucius -- 5.8 China's Foreign Policy Between Humiliation and Harmony -- 5.9 Conclusion -- 6 Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Index -- Back Cover.

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