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Maps 3. Transportation links, station hotels, and tourist destinations in Korea, 1930s
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Preface: Critical Perspectives on Archaeology, Heritage, and Tourism xv
- Conventions xxxvi
- Abbreviations xxxix
-
Heritage Management In Korea and Japan The Politics of Antiquity and Identity
- Map 1. Japanese anthropological surveys in Asia, 1895-1911, showing principal areas to which Torii Ryūzō was dispatched by the Tokyo Anthropological Society 2
- Map 2. Sites of major excavations conducted by the CST in colonial Korea, 1910–45. The dotted circle indicates the sphere of Yamato influence as estimated by Gina Barnes (1988, fig. 3) 3
- Maps 3. Transportation links, station hotels, and tourist destinations in Korea, 1930s 4
- Chapter 1 Ranking “Korean ” Properties: Heritage Administration, South Gate, and Salvaging Buried Remains 5
- Chapter 2 Collecting Japan ’s Curios: World Fairs, Imperial Tombs, and Preservation Laws 34
- Chapter 3 Tracing Japan’s Lineage: Art, Architecture, and Conquest Dynasties 71
- Chapter 4 Searching for the Missing Link: Prehistory, Ethnology, and Racial Discourse 95
- Chapter 5 Excavating Korea ’s Past: Colonialists, Archaeologists, and Nostalgic Ruins 114
- Chapter 6 Rediscovering the Homelands: Travel Myths, Images, and the Narrative of Return 142
- Conclusion: Contested Ownership: The Plunder and the Return of Cultural Treasures 164
- Tables 186
- Notes 196
- Glossary 216
- Bibliography 219
- INDEX 252
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Preface: Critical Perspectives on Archaeology, Heritage, and Tourism xv
- Conventions xxxvi
- Abbreviations xxxix
-
Heritage Management In Korea and Japan The Politics of Antiquity and Identity
- Map 1. Japanese anthropological surveys in Asia, 1895-1911, showing principal areas to which Torii Ryūzō was dispatched by the Tokyo Anthropological Society 2
- Map 2. Sites of major excavations conducted by the CST in colonial Korea, 1910–45. The dotted circle indicates the sphere of Yamato influence as estimated by Gina Barnes (1988, fig. 3) 3
- Maps 3. Transportation links, station hotels, and tourist destinations in Korea, 1930s 4
- Chapter 1 Ranking “Korean ” Properties: Heritage Administration, South Gate, and Salvaging Buried Remains 5
- Chapter 2 Collecting Japan ’s Curios: World Fairs, Imperial Tombs, and Preservation Laws 34
- Chapter 3 Tracing Japan’s Lineage: Art, Architecture, and Conquest Dynasties 71
- Chapter 4 Searching for the Missing Link: Prehistory, Ethnology, and Racial Discourse 95
- Chapter 5 Excavating Korea ’s Past: Colonialists, Archaeologists, and Nostalgic Ruins 114
- Chapter 6 Rediscovering the Homelands: Travel Myths, Images, and the Narrative of Return 142
- Conclusion: Contested Ownership: The Plunder and the Return of Cultural Treasures 164
- Tables 186
- Notes 196
- Glossary 216
- Bibliography 219
- INDEX 252