Chinese collaboration with Japan, 1932-1945 : the limits of accommodation

書誌事項

Chinese collaboration with Japan, 1932-1945 : the limits of accommodation

edited by David P. Barrett and Larry N. Shyu

Stanford University Press, 2001

大学図書館所蔵 件 / 30

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注記

Includes bibliographical references and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

While wartime collaboration in Europe has long been the subject of scholarly attention, relatively little has been published about Chinese collaboration with Japan, largely because essential source materials were inaccessible. Recent liberalization of archival policy in China and Taiwan has made possible this book, the first comprehensive treatment of Sino-Japanese collaboration over the full course of the war, at the level of both state and of society. Collaboration on the basis of a common "greater East Asian" interest was rare since the Japanese came as conquerors acting primarily to further their own national interest. But all Chinese living in the occupied areas had to decide on the degree to which they would accommodate Japanese power-whether political, military, or economic-in order to carry on with their lives. Whether it was Wang Jingwei as "head of state," or Chinese capitalists in Shanghai, or town and village elites in the rural areas, all sought to defend their interests while making the necessary concessions to the Japanese presence. However, even when Chinese sought a modus operandi with the Japanese, they found that a common and equal identity of interest did not exist. Whether expressed in terms of Chinese willingness to collaborate, or Japanese willingness to accept collaboration, the limits of accommodation for both were soon reached. The eleven essays in the volume explore the issue of collaboration from a number of vantage points. In the political sphere, essays range from the foreign policy of the Nationalist government, through the establishment of Japanese client regimes in central China, to the response of local elites in northern and central China to Japanese invasion and occupation. Essays on economic and cultural collaboration focus particularly on the workings of collaboration in Shanghai, the key economic and cultural center of occupied China.

目次

  • Preface David P. Barrett and Larry N. Shyu
  • Note on romanization
  • Maps
  • Introduction: occupied China and the limits of accommodation David P. Barrett
  • Part I. Negotiations With Japan: Official, Unofficial, and Covert: 1. Wang Jingwei and the policy origins of the 'peace movement', 1932-1937 Wang Ke-wen
  • 2. Regional office and the national interest: song zheyuan in North China, 1933-1937 Marjorie Dryburgh
  • 3. Nationalist China's negotiating position during the stalemate, 1938-1945 Huang Meizhen and Yang Hanqing
  • Part II. Client Regimes: Genesis, Character and Justification: 4. The creation of the reformed government in central China, 1938 Timothy Brook
  • 5. The Wang Jingwei regime, 1940-1945: communities and disjunctures with nationalist China David P. Barrett
  • 6. Survival as justification for collaboration, 1937-1945 Lo Jiu-jung
  • Part III. Elite Collaboration: Opportunism, Obstacles and Ambiguities: 7. Japan's new order and the Shanghai capitalists: conflict and collaboration, 1937-1945 Parks M. Coble
  • 8. Patterns and dynamics of elite collaboration in occupied shaoxing country R. Keith Schoppa
  • 9. Resistance in collaboration: Chinese cinema in occupied Shanghai, 1941-1945 Poshek Fu
  • Part IV. The Hinterland: Collaboration, Resistance and Anarchy: 10. The war within a war: a case study of a county on the North China Plain Peter J. Seybolt
  • 11. Communist sources for localizing the study of the Sino-Japanese War Odoric Y. K. Wou
  • Notes
  • Index.

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