Japan’s relations with other nations, both those in Asia and in the West, represent one of the key themes of its 19th century and 20th century history. Events such as the Perry Mission of 1853-54 or the RussoJapanese War in 1904-05 marked pivotal moments and changes in how Japan interacted and dealt with its neighbours and those further afield. More abstractly, a key element of Japan’s modern trajectory has been the question of where it sat, or should sit, in the wider world and emerging international system. Intellectuals and writers such as Fukuzawa Yukichi, Nakae Chōmin, and Okakura Tenshin, among others, wrestled with the issue of Japan’s position in the world
This book analyses two international incidents in the 1920s shocked Japan and changed the way in whi...
This cutting edge collection considers how the Japanese language functions as a key element of Japan...
When we think about Japanese language education for other Asians in Japan today, it is absolutely ne...
Japan’s relations with other nations, both those in Asia and in the West, represent one of the key t...
In the 1920s Aomori prefecture, a rural part of northern Japan, a group of Esperanto clubs emerged a...
This paper attempts to describe the ways in which the Esperanto movement in the early twentieth cent...
The planned language Esperanto achieved popularity in early twentieth century Japan, inspiring a nat...
In 1906, the international language Esperanto exploded onto the scene in Japan, establishing a commu...
Focusing on the early twentieth-century Japanese Esperantist and popular celebrity writer Miyazawa K...
Focusing on the early twentieth-century Japanese Esperantist and popular celebrity writer Miyazawa K...
Esperanto has a long history in Asia, a fact often neglected in discussions of its cultural and soci...
This article joins the debate on the entry of non-European states into International Society by exam...
In the late nineteenth century, Japan was the only non Western country to have successfully faced th...
The history of the academic discipline of Intercultural Communication in Japan began at the end of t...
This article argues that what we now call public diplomacy emerged in the mid- to late 1930s in the ...
This book analyses two international incidents in the 1920s shocked Japan and changed the way in whi...
This cutting edge collection considers how the Japanese language functions as a key element of Japan...
When we think about Japanese language education for other Asians in Japan today, it is absolutely ne...
Japan’s relations with other nations, both those in Asia and in the West, represent one of the key t...
In the 1920s Aomori prefecture, a rural part of northern Japan, a group of Esperanto clubs emerged a...
This paper attempts to describe the ways in which the Esperanto movement in the early twentieth cent...
The planned language Esperanto achieved popularity in early twentieth century Japan, inspiring a nat...
In 1906, the international language Esperanto exploded onto the scene in Japan, establishing a commu...
Focusing on the early twentieth-century Japanese Esperantist and popular celebrity writer Miyazawa K...
Focusing on the early twentieth-century Japanese Esperantist and popular celebrity writer Miyazawa K...
Esperanto has a long history in Asia, a fact often neglected in discussions of its cultural and soci...
This article joins the debate on the entry of non-European states into International Society by exam...
In the late nineteenth century, Japan was the only non Western country to have successfully faced th...
The history of the academic discipline of Intercultural Communication in Japan began at the end of t...
This article argues that what we now call public diplomacy emerged in the mid- to late 1930s in the ...
This book analyses two international incidents in the 1920s shocked Japan and changed the way in whi...
This cutting edge collection considers how the Japanese language functions as a key element of Japan...
When we think about Japanese language education for other Asians in Japan today, it is absolutely ne...