The Japan–South Korea Identity Clash
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Brad Glosserman
About this book
Author / Editor information
Scott A. Snyder is senior fellow for Korea studies and director of the program on U.S.–Korea policy at the Council on Foreign Relations.
Reviews
A highly readable and invaluable analysis.
A comprehensive study that masterfully weaves in a wide range of related topics.
A quick and satisfying read that will appeal to scholars, students, and policy makers.... Recommended.
A useful overview of an important trilateral relationship.
This book offers crucial insights into the identity variables that have changed amid the shifts in domestic and external circumstances such as Korea's democratization and newfound national pride, and the end of the Cold War that brought the core allies of the U.S. together under America's strategic leadership.
A thoughtful and enlightening read.
Kurt M. Campbell, former assistant secretary of State for Asia and Pacific affairs, 2009–2013:
Brad Glosserman and Scott Snyder lay bare in this book the dueling narratives of Japan and South Korea. Both modern, democratic, and market-driven economies animated by twenty-first-century possibilities, Japan and South Korea nevertheless are mired in historical resentments and misunderstanding that continually cloud the future. This political alienation between Seoul and Tokyo provides a vexing challenge for American foreign policy, and the authors here offer valuable insights into how to mitigate and manage the bruised feelings, apprehensions, and latent rivalries that shape one of Asia's most dynamic and least understood relationships. The Japan–South Korea Identity Clash is required reading for anyone seeking to better understand both the possibilities and the inherent limitations of this complex relationship.
Michael J. Green, former special assistant to the president and senior director for Asia at the National Security Council:
In The Japan–South Korea Identity Clash, Brad Glosserman and Scott Snyder unbundle one of the most consequential and seemingly illogical puzzles in contemporary East Asia. Whether or not scholars and policymakers agree with their call for a bold American move to reset relations between these two critical allies and democracies, it is impossible to ignore the authors' pathbreaking analysis—or the strategic consequences they point to in the current impasse.
Gilbert Rozman, Princeton University:
Easy to read, this book covers a very timely topic, as many pundits, officials, and experts are struggling with the issues that are raised. I can think of no book on Japan and South Korea together and on their relationship that is a serious rival.
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