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Japan's Asian Diplomacy

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Japan's relations with its closest neighbors, China and Korea, are tense - exacerbated by disputes over territorial issues and the unresolved trauma of a tumultuous twentieth-century history. In this book, the author, a veteran Japanese diplomat, examines his nation's relations with its East Asian neighbors along a temporal axis stretching back some two thousand years, a perspective he feels is essential to the construction of a new Asian diplomacy. In his view, Japan's relations with China and Korea in modern times have tended to be understood within the context of Japan's relations with the West, and Japanese diplomacy has often operated as a dependent variable of the foreign policies of the Western powers. Yet as the political and economic importance of Asia seems destined to increase in coming years, the interplay of foreign policies among the Asian nations themselves should receive more of a spotlight. In order to fully appreciate Japan's place in Asia and what must be done to rebuild relations with China and Korea, an examination of the deeper patterns of historical contact among these nations serves as an essential point of departure.
[from the back of the book]

231 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2013

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About the author

Ogura Kazuo

3 books

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Profile Image for Yalin.
98 reviews13 followers
November 9, 2019
Ogura's work is an ambitious look at centuries of Japanese interactions with the world in brief and China and Korea in specific, to understand the implications for history and the contemporary state of affairs. Although the discussion is quite well done, one can at times sense a tinge of nationalism lurking in the background, impacting the way in which certain events and their contexts are discussed as part of the text.
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