帝国实践与近代日本领土的形成:对帝国边界的重新思考

IF 0.3 Q4 GEOGRAPHY, PHYSICAL
Edward Boyle
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引用次数: 17

摘要

对帝国概念的重新关注,在日本国内外引发了对明治维新后现代日本帝国主义问题的兴趣。在“全球历史”的标题下,它还把注意力集中在比较欧亚大陆近代早期帝国的问题上。日本并没有真正被纳入后面的讨论。本文首先考察这种缺乏合并的原因,然后讨论将早期现代日本视为帝国形成的价值。它采用的视角是地图学,这是一种典型的帝国实践,在欧亚早期现代性的讨论中占有重要地位。这篇文章考察了将日本北部的Yezo地区并入日本本身的制图学,最终在明治早期将该地区新指定为北海道,这是日本帝国行政地图中最新的线路。这一政治结果是在德川和明治的分歧中发现的各种实践的结果。然而,这种密集多样的实践,不断变化,以应对突发事件,形成了国家效应,通过这种效应,Yezo的土地被赋予了统一,并在地图上得到了体现。地图上的领土提供了国家权力划分的视觉,图形表示,授权自己的测绘实践。以这种方式,国家将自己映射到北海道,从这个角度来看,早期现代和现代时代之间的划分远没有人们通常认为的那么重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Imperial Practice and the making of modern Japan’s territory: Towards a reconsideration of Empire’s boundaries
A renewed focus on the notion of empire has prompted an interest in questions of modern Japanese imperialism after the Meiji Restoration, both in Japan and abroad. It has also focused attention on the issue of comparing empires across Eurasia during the early modern period, under the rubric of ‘global history’. Japan has not really been incorporated into this latter discussion. This article begins by examining the reasons for this lack of incorporation, before moving on to discuss the value of considering early modern Japan as an imperial formation. The lens it adopts is one of cartography, that quintessentially imperial practice that has featured heavily in discussions of a Eurasian early modernity. The article examines the cartographic incorporation of Japan’s northern region of the Yezo into Japan itself, culminating in the area being newly designated as Hokkaido in the early Meiji period, the newest circuit within Imperial Japan’s administrative map. This political outcome was the result of varied practices that found reflection across the Tokugawa–Meiji divide. Yet this intense variety of practices, constantly shifting in response to contingency, served to form the state-effect, through which the land of Yezo was granted its unity and represented on the map. The territory on the map provided the visual, graphic representation of the demarcation of authority of the state that authorized the practice of its own mapping. In this manner, the state mapped itself into Hokkaido and from this perspective, the division between the early modern and modern eras is far less significant than is frequently assumed.
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CiteScore
1.50
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