Books+ Search Results

Making borders in modern East Asia : the Tumen River demarcation, 1881-1919

Title
Making borders in modern East Asia : the Tumen River demarcation, 1881-1919 / Nianshen Song.
ISBN
9781316795491 (ebook)
9781107173958 (hardback)
9781316626290 (paperback)
Publication
Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2018.
Physical Description
1 online resource (xix, 303 pages) : digital, PDF file(s).
Local Notes
Access is available to the Yale community.
Notes
Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 27 Apr 2018).
Access and use
Access restricted by licensing agreement.
Summary
Until the late nineteenth century, the Chinese-Korean Tumen River border was one of the oldest, and perhaps most stable, state boundaries in the world. Spurred by severe food scarcity following a succession of natural disasters, from the 1860s, countless Korean refugees crossed the Tumen River border into Qing-China's Manchuria, triggering a decades-long territorial dispute between China, Korea, and Japan. This major new study of a multilateral and multiethnic frontier highlights the competing state- and nation-building projects in the fraught period that witnessed the Sino-Japanese War, the Russo-Japanese War, and the First World War. The power-plays over land and people simultaneously promoted China's frontier-building endeavours, motivated Korea's nationalist imagination, and stimulated Japan's colonialist enterprise, setting East Asia on an intricate trajectory from the late-imperial to a situation that, Song argues, we call modern.
Variant and related titles
Cambridge University Press eBook Backlist 2018-2019.
Other formats
Print version:
Format
Books / Online
Language
English
Added to Catalog
June 05, 2020
Contents
Introduction : a lost stele and a multivocal river
Crossing the boundary : socioecology of the Tumen River region
Dynastic geography : demarcation as rhetoric
Making 'kando' : the mobility of a cross-border society
Taming the frontier : statecraft and international law
Boundary redefined : a multilayered competition
People redefined : identity politics in Yanbian
Conclusion : our land, our people
Epilogue : Tumen River, the film.
Citation

Available from:

Online
Loading holdings.
Unable to load. Retry?
Loading holdings...
Unable to load. Retry?