1. Introduction 2. Dreaming Big About Pan-Asianist Education: From ‘Asia University’ to ‘Kenkoku (Nation-Building) University’ 3. Exploring the Meanings of Pan-Asia: Japanese Students’ Experiences at Kenkoku University 4. Calling Asia a New Home: Korean and Taiwanese Students’ Experiences at Kenkoku University 5. Learning to Become ‘Chinese’ at a Japanese School: Chinese Students’ Experiences at Kenkoku University 6. Building a Utopia Together: Kenkoku, a Juku Periodical, as a Window into Kenkoku University’s Institutional Practice of Pan-Asianism 7. Epilogue Notes Bibliography Index
Using Kenkoku University in Japanese-occupied Manchuria as a case study, this book examines the institutional practice of Japanese's wartime ideology of Pan-Asianism and how it was perceived, critiqued, and experienced by individuals.
Yuka Hiruma Kishida is Assistant Professor of History at Bridgewater College, USA.
[The] book goes beyond the institutional history of Kenkoku
University: the microhistory approach offers fresh insights into
the historiography of the relationship and tensions between the
universalism of Pan-Asianist idealism and the particularism and
power hegemony created by notions of Japanese privilege and
supremacy within the imperial context … Hiruma Kishida’s book is an
example of the sophistication and maturity in the historiography of
Japanese imperialism and Pan-Asianism.
*The Journal of Japanese Studies*
Yuka Hiruma Kishida has written a thoroughly researched and
informative book ... Kishida makes a significant and unique
contribution which adds to previous scholarship ... The book
ultimately deepens our understanding of the complex incentives for
personal and national advancement provided within the framework of
the Japanese empire, the conditions forging a spectrum of political
worldviews, which had lasting impact in the region, and the nuanced
gray areas between collaboration and resistance.
*Social Science Japan Journal*
Kishida’s study offers fascinating insight into the
disillusionments, agonized choices, and occasional satisfactions,
that resulted when youths resolved to devote themselves to genuine
ethnic equality and pan-Asianist coprosperity within a hierarchical
system dominated by Japan. This thoroughly documented inquiry lays
bare the ideological contradictions that inhered throughout
Manchukuo and the entire wartime Japanese empire.
*J. Victor Koschmann, Professor of History, Cornell University,
USA*
I expect Butler’s work will inspire many important conversations …
This work should be read widely. In addition to all practitioners
and scholars of transhumanism, Black theology, and philosophy of
religion, it will be of interest to many, including those in the
fields of cognitive science of religion, critical theory and
critical race theory, posthumanism, contemplative studies, new
materialisms, and spirituality studies.
*Reading Religion*
This impressive study presents intriguing conclusions regarding the
dissemination and reception of pan-Asian thought at grass-roots
level. It is a valuable addition to the growing literature on the
history of regionalism in East Asia.
*Sven Saaler, Professor of Modern Japanese History, Sophia
University, Japan*
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