توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Modern Japanese Political Thought and International Relations
نام کتاب : Modern Japanese Political Thought and International Relations
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : اندیشه سیاسی مدرن ژاپن و روابط بین الملل
سری : Global Dialogues: Developing Non-Eurocentric IR and IPE
نویسندگان : Felix Rösch, Atsuko Watanabe
ناشر : Rowman & Littlefield
سال نشر : 2018
تعداد صفحات : 271
ISBN (شابک) : 9781786603678 , 9781786603692
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 2 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
Cover
Modern Japanese Political Thought and International Relations
Modern Japanese Political Thought and International Relations
Copyright
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Challenging International Law and Toward a Global IR?
Chapter 1
How Did Two Daos Perceive the International Differently?
A Quasi Solidarity?
Ethos and Social Imaginary
Perceptions of the International in Japan and China
Conclusion
References
Chapter 2
Japan’s Early Challenge to Eurocentrism and the World Court
The Japanese Government and the World Court
Japan’s Turn to Civilizational Egocentrism
Conclusion: The Legacy of Japan’s Early Attempt to Challenge Eurocentrism
Notes
References
Chapter 3
Kōtarō Tanaka (1890–1974) and Global International Relations
Prelude to Tanaka’s Latin American Informal Diplomacy
National Diplomacy in Practice: Tanaka’s Intercultural Activities
Tanaka’s Latin American–Based IR Theory
Notes
References
Empire-Building or in Search for Global Peace?
Chapter 4
Unlearning Asia
Another Story of “Region”?
Re-Contextualizing Datsu-A-Ron
Past, Present, and Future
Conclusion: Region as Alternative?
Note
References
Chapter 5
Pursuing a More Dynamic Concept of Peace
Establishing the IPR
The IPR in the 1920s: Peace as Preserving the Status Quo
The IPR after the 1930s: Searching a Renewed Concept of Peace
The IPR and the Contemporary World
Notes
References
Chapter 6
Rethinking the Liberal/Pluralist Vision of Japan’s Colonial Studies
Colonial Studies in Japan
Civilization and Global Civil Society
Dehumanizing Effects of Colonization and Colonial Economic Development
Autonomy of the Colonized
Promoting Autonomy in the Liberal International Order
Conclusion
References
Local(ized) Japanese Political Concepts for Twenty-First Century International Relations
Chapter 7
Who Are the People?
Kokumin, Minzoku, and Shimin: Communist Discourses, 1945–1955
Differences in Party Platforms: 1945–1964
The Rise of Shimin: 1960–1970
Two Connotations of Shimin: 1970–1996
Backlash against Shimin and the Return to Kokumin: 1996–2009
And the Present: From 2009 to Today
Notes
References
Chapter 8
Amae as Emotional Interdependence
Dependence and Dependency in IR
Amae: Emotional Interdependence
Japan’s Nuclear Energy and the United States
Conclusion
Notes
References
Chapter 9
The Pitfalls in the Project of Overcoming Western Modernity
A Reversal of Superiority: The Emergence of Western “Universality”
Overcoming Modernity and Pan-Asianism as a Rhetoric
The Logic of Violent Paternalism in Asianism
Conclusion
Notes
References
Forming an Imagined Community, yet Reaching People Globally?
Chapter 10
From Failure to Fame
Part 1: Names, Vignettes, and Failure
Part 2: “Shōin” Becomes a Hero
Conclusion
Notes
References
Chapter 11
Hayao Miyazaki as a Political Thinker
Culture as Power
Japan’s Soft Power Diplomacy Values and Right Wing Kyoto School Philosophers’ Cultural Politics
Culture and Self-Reflection in Tosaka’s Theory of Morality
Hayao Miyazaki’s Anime and Moral Reflection
Conclusion
Notes
References
Chapter 12
Who’s the Egg? Who’s the Wall?
The Wall versus the Egg
Hong Kong since the Umbrella Movement
Egg as Food or as Life?
An Egg, and so Much More
Who’s the Wall?
On to Ontology
Conclusion
Notes
References
Unique, but in What Sense?
The Self in the Japanese Formula
In Lieu of Conclusion: A Dialogue without Boundary
Notes
References
Index
About the Contributors
About the Editors