This dissertation argues that the Japanese modern nation was formed not only from the inside but also from the outside, through nationalizing Japanese emigrants around the Pacific Rim. The study examines critical roles of Japanese overseas emigrants in shaping the ideologies and social movements in the Japanese empire. It discusses how the efforts made by Japanese thinkers and social educators in nationalizing these dispersed and marginal subjects were crucial to the creation of Japanese modernity. This study defines Japanese imperialism as "diasporic " in three dimensions. First, it illustrates the close and dynamic connections Japanese migration to the empire's Asian colonies and to other parts of the world. In particular, ...
This dissertation examined the formation of Japanese identity politics after World War II. Since Wor...
The 1860 Japanese Embassy to the United States sparked a whirlwind of national optimism and cultural...
This dissertation investigates the relationships and discourse among “in-between” people under Japan...
This dissertation argues that the Japanese modern nation was formed not only from the inside but als...
This dissertation argues that the Japanese modern nation was formed not only from the inside but als...
2014-07-17This dissertation examines pre-World War II Japanese migration to the United States, parti...
This dissertation examines 50,000 American migrants of Japanese ancestry (Nisei) who traversed acros...
Scholars have long studied the rise of Japan’s commercial and cultural influence during the twentiet...
In this thesis, first of all, I stressed the reason why I should study the history of migration in m...
2015-09-30This dissertation examines the ways in which Asian American internationalism developed in ...
This dissertation explores Asian discourses produced by Japanese social scientists during the wartim...
This dissertation examines the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere, Japan’s ambitious attempt to ...
This dissertation is a theoretically grounded and systematic study of the concept of race and racial...
My dissertation, “From Picture Brides to War Brides: Race, Gender, and Belonging in the Making of Ja...
Research on transnationalism in the social sciences has grown tremendously over the past several dec...
This dissertation examined the formation of Japanese identity politics after World War II. Since Wor...
The 1860 Japanese Embassy to the United States sparked a whirlwind of national optimism and cultural...
This dissertation investigates the relationships and discourse among “in-between” people under Japan...
This dissertation argues that the Japanese modern nation was formed not only from the inside but als...
This dissertation argues that the Japanese modern nation was formed not only from the inside but als...
2014-07-17This dissertation examines pre-World War II Japanese migration to the United States, parti...
This dissertation examines 50,000 American migrants of Japanese ancestry (Nisei) who traversed acros...
Scholars have long studied the rise of Japan’s commercial and cultural influence during the twentiet...
In this thesis, first of all, I stressed the reason why I should study the history of migration in m...
2015-09-30This dissertation examines the ways in which Asian American internationalism developed in ...
This dissertation explores Asian discourses produced by Japanese social scientists during the wartim...
This dissertation examines the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere, Japan’s ambitious attempt to ...
This dissertation is a theoretically grounded and systematic study of the concept of race and racial...
My dissertation, “From Picture Brides to War Brides: Race, Gender, and Belonging in the Making of Ja...
Research on transnationalism in the social sciences has grown tremendously over the past several dec...
This dissertation examined the formation of Japanese identity politics after World War II. Since Wor...
The 1860 Japanese Embassy to the United States sparked a whirlwind of national optimism and cultural...
This dissertation investigates the relationships and discourse among “in-between” people under Japan...