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7. Becoming Japanese: Imperial Expansion and Identity Crises in the Early Twentieth Century
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Foreword ix
- Preface xi
- Introduction 1
-
I: Geographical and Cultural Space
- 1. Peopling the Japanese Empire: The Koreans in Manchuria and the Rhetoric of Inclusion 25
- 2. Integrating into Chinese Society: A Comparison of the Japanese Communities of Shanghai and Harbin 45
- 3. Space and Aesthetic Imagination in Some Taishò Writings 70
- 4. The City and the Countryside: Competing Taishō “Modernities” on Gender 91
- 5. Naturalizing Nationhood: Ideology and Practice in Early Twentieth-Century Japan 114
- 6. Asano Wasaburò and Japanese Spiritualism in Early Twentieth-Century Japan 133
-
II: Cosmopolitanism and National Identity
- 7. Becoming Japanese: Imperial Expansion and Identity Crises in the Early Twentieth Century 157
- 8. Culture, Ethnicity, and the State in Early Twentieth-Century Japan 181
- 9. Writing the National Narrative: Changing Attitudes toward Nation-Building among Japanese Writers, 1900–1930 206
- 10. The Bunriha and the Problem of “Tradition” for Modernist Architecture in Japan, 1920–1928 228
- 11. Defining the Modern Nation in Japanese Popular Song, 1914–1932 247
-
III: Diversity, Autonomy, and Integration
- 12 Media Culture in Taishò Osaka 267
- 13 Zaikai and Taishò Demokurashii, 1900–1930 288
- 14 Fashioning a Culture of Diligence and Thrift: Savings and Frugality Campaigns in Japan, 1900–1931 312
- 15 Visions of Women and the New Society in Conflict: Yamakawa Kikue versus Takamure Itsue 335
- 16 Broadcasting in Korea, 1924–1937: Colonial Modernity and Cultural Hegemony 358
- Contributors 379
- Index 383
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Foreword ix
- Preface xi
- Introduction 1
-
I: Geographical and Cultural Space
- 1. Peopling the Japanese Empire: The Koreans in Manchuria and the Rhetoric of Inclusion 25
- 2. Integrating into Chinese Society: A Comparison of the Japanese Communities of Shanghai and Harbin 45
- 3. Space and Aesthetic Imagination in Some Taishò Writings 70
- 4. The City and the Countryside: Competing Taishō “Modernities” on Gender 91
- 5. Naturalizing Nationhood: Ideology and Practice in Early Twentieth-Century Japan 114
- 6. Asano Wasaburò and Japanese Spiritualism in Early Twentieth-Century Japan 133
-
II: Cosmopolitanism and National Identity
- 7. Becoming Japanese: Imperial Expansion and Identity Crises in the Early Twentieth Century 157
- 8. Culture, Ethnicity, and the State in Early Twentieth-Century Japan 181
- 9. Writing the National Narrative: Changing Attitudes toward Nation-Building among Japanese Writers, 1900–1930 206
- 10. The Bunriha and the Problem of “Tradition” for Modernist Architecture in Japan, 1920–1928 228
- 11. Defining the Modern Nation in Japanese Popular Song, 1914–1932 247
-
III: Diversity, Autonomy, and Integration
- 12 Media Culture in Taishò Osaka 267
- 13 Zaikai and Taishò Demokurashii, 1900–1930 288
- 14 Fashioning a Culture of Diligence and Thrift: Savings and Frugality Campaigns in Japan, 1900–1931 312
- 15 Visions of Women and the New Society in Conflict: Yamakawa Kikue versus Takamure Itsue 335
- 16 Broadcasting in Korea, 1924–1937: Colonial Modernity and Cultural Hegemony 358
- Contributors 379
- Index 383