Click Here for the Book of the Month
TIME   London: New York: Tokyo: Beijing: Seoul:
HOME  ABOUT US ORDERING NEWS AUTHOR LOGIN AUTHOR GUIDELINES CONTACT US AGENTS
Inner Asia Information Editorial Team Past Issue Contents Author Instructions Subscriptions
New Journal - Inner Asia
ISSN 1464-8172
Past Contents

The Power of Imagination: Whose Northeast and Whose Manchuria?

Li Narangoa

Inner Asia 4(2002): 3-25

In the early twentieth century, Manchuria became what Owen Lattimore called a 'Cradle of Conflict' where Russia and Japan competed for supremacy in Northeast Asia. Russian and Japanese involvement in Mongolia and Manchuria, especially after the Russo-Japanese War, compelled Chinese authorities to certify that the Northeast (Dongbei), that is Manchuria, was an integral part of China. Japan, for its part, asserted the opposite and represented Manchuria as a territory separate from China in order to justify its presence there. In this paper I argue that Japanese and Chinese travellers' accounts, their reconnaissance or memoir writings on Manchuria and its Manchu and Mongolian inhabitants, were part of larger geographical and historical constructions of power struggle, in terms of both the Japanese claim for Manchuria and the Chinese 'response' to the loss of Manchuria.

[back]
© Copyright Global Oriental Ltd. | Terms of Use | Information
View my Shopping Cart