{"title":"Japanese Empire and Pan-Asianism","authors":"Sven Saaler","doi":"10.1093/acrefore/9780190277727.013.373","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The Japanese colonial empire was composed of territories adjacent to the Japanese archipelago, ranging from Southern Sakhalin in the north to Taiwan in the south. Unlike most European powers, Japan did not acquire colonial territories that were far away from the metropolis; rather, it did so within the region in which it was located—East Asia. The geographical proximity between the metropolis and its colonial territories influenced not only the structure of the colonial administration, racial hierarchies in the empire, and colonial and metropolitan identities but also the rhetorical strategies that were used to legitimize colonial rule.\n Although the government generally envisioned a European-style empire, the creation of which would earn Japan the respect of the Great Powers and eventually lead to the recognition of Japanese equality, a significant number of politicians, writers, and activists argued that it was Japan’s mission to unite the Asian people and protect or liberate them from Western colonial rule. These discourses have been summarized under the term “Pan-Asianism,” a movement and an ideology that emerged in the late 19th century and became mainstream by the time World War I began. However, although some advocates of Pan-Asianism were motivated by sincere feelings of solidarity, the expansion of Japanese colonial rule and the escalation of war in China and throughout Asia in the 1930s brought to the fore an increasing number of contradictions and ambiguities. By the time World War II started, Pan-Asianism had become a cloak of Japanese expansionism and an instrument to legitimize the empire, a process that culminated in the Greater East Asia Conference of 1943.\n The contradictions between Japan’s brutal wars in Asia and the ideology of Asian solidarity continue to haunt that country’s relations with its neighbors, by way of ambiguous historical memories of the empire and war in contemporary Japanese politics and society.","PeriodicalId":270501,"journal":{"name":"Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Asian History","volume":"1 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2019-04-26","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Asian History","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190277727.013.373","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
The Japanese colonial empire was composed of territories adjacent to the Japanese archipelago, ranging from Southern Sakhalin in the north to Taiwan in the south. Unlike most European powers, Japan did not acquire colonial territories that were far away from the metropolis; rather, it did so within the region in which it was located—East Asia. The geographical proximity between the metropolis and its colonial territories influenced not only the structure of the colonial administration, racial hierarchies in the empire, and colonial and metropolitan identities but also the rhetorical strategies that were used to legitimize colonial rule.
Although the government generally envisioned a European-style empire, the creation of which would earn Japan the respect of the Great Powers and eventually lead to the recognition of Japanese equality, a significant number of politicians, writers, and activists argued that it was Japan’s mission to unite the Asian people and protect or liberate them from Western colonial rule. These discourses have been summarized under the term “Pan-Asianism,” a movement and an ideology that emerged in the late 19th century and became mainstream by the time World War I began. However, although some advocates of Pan-Asianism were motivated by sincere feelings of solidarity, the expansion of Japanese colonial rule and the escalation of war in China and throughout Asia in the 1930s brought to the fore an increasing number of contradictions and ambiguities. By the time World War II started, Pan-Asianism had become a cloak of Japanese expansionism and an instrument to legitimize the empire, a process that culminated in the Greater East Asia Conference of 1943.
The contradictions between Japan’s brutal wars in Asia and the ideology of Asian solidarity continue to haunt that country’s relations with its neighbors, by way of ambiguous historical memories of the empire and war in contemporary Japanese politics and society.
日本殖民帝国由与日本列岛相邻的领土组成,北起南库页岛,南至台湾。与大多数欧洲列强不同,日本没有获得远离大都市的殖民领土;相反,它是在它所处的地区——东亚——内这样做的。大都市与其殖民领土之间的地理邻近不仅影响了殖民行政机构的结构、帝国的种族等级、殖民地和大都市的身份认同,而且还影响了用于使殖民统治合法化的修辞策略。尽管政府总体上设想了一个欧洲式的帝国,这样的帝国的建立将为日本赢得列强的尊重,并最终导致日本的平等得到承认,但相当多的政治家、作家和活动家认为,日本的使命是团结亚洲人民,保护或将他们从西方殖民统治中解放出来。这些论述被概括为“泛亚洲主义”(Pan-Asianism),这是19世纪末出现的一种运动和意识形态,在第一次世界大战开始时成为主流。然而,尽管泛亚洲主义的一些倡导者是出于真诚的团结感情,但20世纪30年代日本殖民统治的扩大和战争在中国乃至整个亚洲的升级,使越来越多的矛盾和模糊浮出水面。到第二次世界大战开始时,泛亚主义已经成为日本扩张主义的外衣和使帝国合法化的工具,这一进程在1943年的大东亚会议(Greater East Asia Conference)上达到高潮。日本在亚洲的残酷战争与亚洲团结的意识形态之间的矛盾,通过对帝国和战争在当代日本政治和社会中模糊的历史记忆,继续困扰着日本与邻国的关系。