Late Qing China and Meiji Japan: Political and Cultural Aspects
Book Details
Description
Scholarly interest has grown over the last two decades in the interaction between China and Japan during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. While much of that interest has centered on the wars fought in the period, Late Qing China and Meiji Japan looks instead at the confluence between Chinese and Japanese history. Focusing on the cultural and political spheres, this volume places those relationships at center stage and presents a distinct new field of Sino-Japanese interactions that, while related to Chinese and Japanese history, has an integrity of its own.
Late Qing China and Meiji Japan covers the last years of the Tokugawa regime through the end of the Meiji era and into the early TaishŠperiod — roughly the 1850s through the 1920s — and the last decades of the Qing empire through the first of the fledgling Chinese Republic. This was, without a doubt, the most intense period of Sino-Japanese intercourse in history. Actual contacts between Chinese and Japanese were renewed on a regular basis for the first time in centuries. Japanese began traveling to all parts of China. Thousands of young Chinese, male and female, flocked to Japanese institutions of higher learning, and hundreds of Japanese instructors were invited to teach at Chinese schools.
It all tragically came to an end with JapanÂ’s military invasion of the mainland in the 1930s and only began to be resumed in the 1980s.
