Figures, Tables, Maps, and Photographs Abbreviations Epigraph Sources Introduction Part I: Genesis, 1853-1931 1. An Emerging Empire in the Age of Submarine Telegraphy 2. Wireless and the Crisis in the Informal Empire Part II: Technology, 1931-1940 3. Toward a New Order on the Continent 4. Inventing Japanese Technology 5. Envisioning Imperial Integration Part III: Control, 1936-1945 6. Negotiating Control at Home 7. Consolidating Control in China 8. Gaining Control in Southeast Asia Part IV: Network, 1939-1945 9. Integrating Systems 10. Operation, Meltdown and Aftermath Conclusion Bibliography Index
Daqing Yang is Associate Professor of History and International Affairs, George Washington University.
Yang carefully examines Japan’s submarine and wireless telegraph
and telephone networks and the ways in which the emerging system
grew within Japan’s expanding empire, as well as the ways in which
the configuration of the system supported the empire and was, in
turn, shaped by the demands and complexity of it. Scholars and
graduate students interested in modern Japan, comparative empires,
and/or technology and society will learn much from this new,
important book.
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