Introduction: 1919, East Asia, and the Dawning of a New Era
Part I: Era of Sovereignty and Nationalism in East Asia
Chapter 1: Building China Abroad: May Fourth, Overseas Chinese, and the Construction of the Chinese Nation-State
Chapter 2: From Trust to Mistrust: Sino-Japanese Relations after the Versailles Settlement
Chapter 3: The Rise of a New Generation: May Fourth Intellectual Factionalism and the Attacks on Kang Youwei
Chapter 4: The Buryat-Mongol National Movement and Japanese Interests in Siberia, 1917–1919
Chapter 5: 1919: The Historical Origin of the New Cold War on the Korean Peninsula
Part II: War, Peace, and Diplomacy in the Asia-Pacific Era
Chapter 6: The Elusive Equality: Versailles as a Turning Point in U.S.-Japan Race Relations
Chapter 7: Making Peace from the Great War: A Generational Shift in Japanese Diplomacy in 1919
Chapter 8: A Lost Chance for Peace: The China Crisis of 1919 and the Debate on Japanese-Chinese Friendship in Japan
Chapter 9: Naval Powers in the Pacific at the Crossroads
Chapter 10: Future War and Future Peace after 1919: Ishiwara Kanji and the Imperial Japanese Army in the Wake of the First World War
Chapter 11: Tragic War, Lasting Peace: Japan and the Construction of Global Peace, 1919-1930
Tosh Minohara is professor of US–Japan relations at Kobe University.
Evan Dawley is associate professor of history at Goucher College.
As the title indicates, this major collaborative volume takes our
attention beyond the Versailles peace conference to what happened
in and around a pivotal year--'the 1919 moment.' The truly
international background of the contributors reflects another shift
of attention, this one opposing the Euro-American focus that has
characterized most histories of the post-World War I years to
highlight East Asia and East Asians, not merely as passive
recipients, but as active agents of postwar transformative changes.
From diverse methodological and interpretive approaches, the
contributors demonstrate that the year 1919 led to 'a seismic shift
in global politics' which East Asians actively attempted to shape
as well as challenge.--Elise K. Tipton, University of Sydney
This groundbreaking volume edited by Tosh Minohara and Evan Dawley
helps us overcome all the Eurocentric historical narratives on the
moment of 1919 by putting a spotlight on Northeast Asia. The volume
makes a persuasive case that seeing 1919 from an East Asian context
makes us better understand its global history and its enduring
legacies today. Contributors to this volume collectively reorient
the way we should think about both the spatialization and the
periodization of 1919.--Cemil Aydin, University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill
With new empirical and conceptual research and approaches, this
volume provides a timely and refreshing historical perspective to
help us understand today's South and East Asia, which has been
experiencing equally challenging events such as border clashes
between India and China, Taiwan's cry for international
recognition, Hong Kong's fight for democracy, and China's
belligerent policies and confrontations with many countries. Anyone
who is interested in what happened one hundred years ago and wants
to know the possible future of South and East Asia should read this
book. --Xu Guoqi, The University of Hong Kong
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