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| Book Review | The American Historical Review, 105.4 | The History Cooperative
105.4  
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October, 2000
 
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Book Review



Asia



See Heng Teow. Japan's Cultural Policy toward China, 1918–1931: A Comparative Perspective. (Harvard East Asian Monographs, number 175.) Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Asia Center; distributed by Harvard University Press. 1999. Pp. xiii, 310.

See Heng Teow's work describing China between the wars takes its place among studies revisiting the complex era of 1918–1931 with its warlord diversity, a phony Peking government, and finally a new central government at Nanking. Recent scholars view that China not as a passive recipient of "cultural imperialism," but as assertive and active. Teow, like Sun Youli in China and the Origins of the Pacific War, 1931–1941 (1993), and I in my Chinese Boycotts versus Japanese Bombs: The Failure of China's Revolutionary Diplomacy, 1931–1932 (1991), sees China, despite an absence of central strength, actively pressing its interests in international relations. Teow argues that in the spending of Japan's Boxer Rebellion indemnity remissions, China was unlike helpless victims of foreign "cultural imperialism," asserting its own objectives sometimes against Tokyo's designs. This is worth noting. His definition of Japan's cultural approach, however, is so inclusively fuzzy that conclusions are difficult. 1
     Rather than defining what was cultural in Japan's China policy, he leaves the reader to decipher the "cultural development experience" that Japan sought to impose on China. Teow uses, interchangeably, the terms "cultural," "policy," "diplomacy," and "influence" as well as "cultural imperialism." Concentrating on Tokyo's projects in China funded by the indemnity remissions, the author compares Japan's experience with similarly funded American and British projects, which he expands to include private and philanthropic projects. What Teow considers Japan's "cultural" approach from 1918–1931 includes not only educational and scholarly projects but public health and relief, as well as scientific and medical aid and facilities. . . .


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