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Tables of Contents for The History of Anglo-Japanese Relations 1600-2000
Chapter/Section Title
Page #
Page Count
List of Table and Figures
x
 
List of Plates
xii
 
List of Contributors and their Affiliations
xiii
 
Foreword
xiv
 
Preface: International History - From Diplomacy to Culture
xvi
 
Acknowledgements
xvii
 
Note on Japanese Names
xviii
 
PART I INTRODUCTION
1
40
Elites, Governments and Citizens: Some British Perceptions of Japan, 1850--2000
3
14
Gordon Daniels
The Changing Image of Britain among Japanese Intellectuals
17
24
Chushichi Tsuzuki
Early images of Britain as a mighty colonial power
17
3
The Anglo-Satsuma War: from a Britain to be defied to Britain as an ally
20
1
Liberal Britain and Meiji intellectuals
21
1
Britain and social democracy: Katayama Sen
22
2
Keir Hardie in Japan
24
1
The Webbs and Japan
25
1
Taisho democracy and Britain
26
3
Japanese Fabians
29
1
Nationalists and Britain: Kuga Katsunan and Kita Ikki
30
1
Kawai Eijiro and T. H. Green
31
1
The Pacific War and the post-war era
32
1
The Britain of the Labour Party
32
2
Japanese Fabians for Japan's Economic Autonomy
34
1
The movement for nuclear disarmament
35
1
The `London Renaissance'
36
1
Britain in the 1980s and 1990s
37
4
PART II THE NINETEENTH CENTURY AND AFTER
41
130
Early Japanese Visitors to Victorian Britain
43
17
Andrew Cobbing
Early travels in the Edo period
43
4
The voyage to Europe
47
2
The Japanese in Britain
49
2
Return to Japan
51
3
Japanese images of Victorian Britain
54
6
The Rituals of Anglo-Japanese Diplomacy: Imperial Audiences in Early Meiji Japan
60
17
John Breen
A historic audience
60
1
The problem
61
1
The emperor
61
4
The ritual structuring of international relations
65
5
Imperial audiences and internal relations of power
70
4
Conclusion
74
3
For the Triumph of the Cross: A Survey of the British Missionary Movement in Japan, 1869--1945
77
26
Hamish Ion
British missionaries in Meiji Japan
81
5
Growing unease
86
5
War and reconciliation
91
3
Conclusion
94
9
Theatre Cultures in Contact: Britain and Japan in the Meiji Period
103
15
Brian Powell
`To Adapt, or Not to Adapt': Hamlet in Meiji Japan
118
28
Mark Williams
David Rycroft
Kanagaki Robun
126
7
Tsubouchi Shoyo
133
8
Conclusion
141
5
The British Discovery of Japanese Art
146
25
Yuko Kikuchi
Toshio Watanabe
Introduction
146
1
From ethnographical specimen to work of art: mid-nineteenth-century recognition of Japanese art
147
4
Design theorists at international exhibitions (1860s--1870s)
151
2
Japanese art and British Aestheticism (1870s--1880s)
153
3
The vicissitudes of the British perception of Japanese art (1800s-- )
156
5
Bernard Leach and the Anglo-Japanese aesthetic relationship
161
10
PART III TWENTIETH-CENTURY THEMES
171
36
The Modernist Inheritance in Japanese Social Studies: Fukuzawa, Marxists and Otsuka Hisao
173
16
Kazuhiko Kondo
Fukuzawa's concern and inheritance
173
2
Historical studies in Meiji Japan
175
3
Developmental history and national characteristics
178
3
Otsuka Hisao and Maruyama Masao
181
3
Conclusion
184
5
Japanese Feminism and British Influences: The Case of Yamakawa Kikue (1890--1980)
189
18
Kei Imai
Preface
189
1
The Japanese `Bluestocking' (Seito) and the beginning of Japanese feminism
190
1
Yamakawa Kikue as a pioneer of modern feminism
191
4
Yamakawa's perception of women workers in Britain and Japan
195
5
Yamakawa Kikue and Britain after the Second World War
200
2
Conclusion
202
5
PART IV THE INTER-WAR YEARS
207
106
New Liberalism and Welfare Economics: British Influences and Japanese Intellectuals Between the Wars - Fukuda Tokuzo and Ueda Teijiro
209
11
Tamotsu Nishizawa
Introduction
209
1
Two intellectual leaders
210
1
Background: from the German historical School to new liberalism
211
1
Fukuda, Marshall and welfare economics
212
3
Ueda and new liberalism
215
5
Yanagi Muneyoshi (1889--1961) and the British Medievalist Tradition
220
7
Toshio Kusamitsu
Yanaihara Tadao and the British Empire as a Model for Colonial Reform
227
19
Susan C. Townsend
`Nation Shall Speak Peace Unto Nation': The BBC and Japan, 1929--1939
246
19
Gordon Daniels
Philip Charrier
Introduction
246
2
1929--1931: Japan, China and the Soviet Union
248
1
The Manchurian Crisis, 1931--33
249
3
Manchukuo, 1934--35
252
2
Economic issues, 1933--35
254
2
The 26 February incident, 1936
256
1
The Anti-Comintern Pact, 1936--37
257
1
Domestic politics and the China War, 1937--39
257
5
Conclusion
262
3
Anglo-Japanese Trade Union Relations Between the Wars
265
16
Takao Matsumura
Awkward beginnings through the International Transport Worker's Federation
265
3
Japanese seamen's ambivalence towards Japanese expansion in China
268
2
Japan's war with China and the British movement to boycott Japanese Goods
270
11
British Writing on Contemporary Japan, 1924--1941: Newspapers, Books, Reviews and Propaganda
281
32
Jon Pardoe
Introduction
281
1
Newspapers
281
7
Books
288
13
Japanese propaganda
301
1
Conclusion
301
4
Appendix: Japan in the pages of Punch, 1921--1938
305
8
PART V: THE POST-WAR ERA (1945--2000)
313
65
British Labour and Japanese Socialists: Convergence and Divergence, 1945--1952
315
15
James Babb
Introduction
315
1
The assumption of power by the left in Britain and Japan
316
2
The issue of coal nationalization in Britain and Japan
318
1
The issue of the cost of economic recovery
319
3
Different paths confirmed: peace treaty and defence
322
5
Conclusions
327
3
Masking or Marking Britain's Decline? The British Council and Cultural Diplomacy in Japan, 1952--1970
330
22
Christopher Aldous
Selling British culture short
334
7
The promise of expansion
341
5
Rebranding Britain
346
1
Conclusion
347
5
Post-War Japan as a Model for British Reform
352
26
Kevin McCormick
Introduction
352
1
From the 1940s to the 1960s: considering Japan
353
2
From the 1970s to the 1980s: taking Japan more seriously
355
13
The 1990s: doubts and debates
368
1
Conclusions
369
9
Index
378