Kenkoku University, 1938-1945: interrogating the praxis of Pan-Asianist ideology in Japanese occupied Manchuria

Kenkoku University (Nation-Building University, abbreviated as Kendai) was the university founded in 1938 by the Kwantung Army, the Japanese army of occupation of the northeastern provinces of China commonly designated Manchuria. Sheared off from China by the Kwantung Army in March 1932 and declared...

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Main Author: Hiruma Kishida, Yuka
Other Authors: Vlastos, Stephen, 1943-
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of Iowa 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/6591
https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=8090&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-uiowa.edu-oai-ir.uiowa.edu-etd-80902019-10-13T04:32:19Z Kenkoku University, 1938-1945: interrogating the praxis of Pan-Asianist ideology in Japanese occupied Manchuria Hiruma Kishida, Yuka Kenkoku University (Nation-Building University, abbreviated as Kendai) was the university founded in 1938 by the Kwantung Army, the Japanese army of occupation of the northeastern provinces of China commonly designated Manchuria. Sheared off from China by the Kwantung Army in March 1932 and declared an independent country, Manchukuo existed as a client state of Japan on the margins of the international order, recognized by a handful of nations. Kendai was the only institution of higher learning administered directly by the Manchukuo's governing authority, the State Council, which was dominated by Japanese officers. Kendai recruited male students of Japanese, Chinese, Korean, Taiwanese, Mongolian, and Russian backgrounds, and aimed to nurture a generation of leaders who would actualize the Pan-Asianist goal of "harmony among various peoples residing in Manchukuo," one of the founding principles of Manchukuo. Wartime relations between Japanese and non-Japanese are often framed in terms of binary narratives of resistance to or collaboration with Japanese imperialism. Assuming that national consciousness had firmly taken root in people's minds, most historians simply dismiss Japan's wartime discourse of Pan-Asianism as just another empty rationale for the domination of subject peoples by an imperial power, akin to the Anglo-American ‘white man's burden.’ Recent scholarship, however, has complicated the picture by identifying multiple and competing articulations of Pan-Asianism, while re-examining its effects on policy making and its reception by subject populations. My dissertation extends this effort by investigating actual practices of Pan-Asianism as experienced by Japanese and Asian students enrolled at a unique institution whose ideal was Asian unity on the basis of equality. Taking Kendai as a case study and uncovering the interactions that shaped relations below the level of the state, I attempt to demonstrate that the idealistic and egalitarian version of Pan-Asianism exercised considerable appeal even late into World War II. 2013-12-01T08:00:00Z dissertation application/pdf https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/6591 https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=8090&context=etd Copyright © 2013 Yuka Hiruma Kishida Theses and Dissertations eng University of IowaVlastos, Stephen, 1943- colonial education Colonialism Japanese Empire Manchukuo Pan-Asianism Transnational History
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic colonial education
Colonialism
Japanese Empire
Manchukuo
Pan-Asianism
Transnational
History
spellingShingle colonial education
Colonialism
Japanese Empire
Manchukuo
Pan-Asianism
Transnational
History
Hiruma Kishida, Yuka
Kenkoku University, 1938-1945: interrogating the praxis of Pan-Asianist ideology in Japanese occupied Manchuria
description Kenkoku University (Nation-Building University, abbreviated as Kendai) was the university founded in 1938 by the Kwantung Army, the Japanese army of occupation of the northeastern provinces of China commonly designated Manchuria. Sheared off from China by the Kwantung Army in March 1932 and declared an independent country, Manchukuo existed as a client state of Japan on the margins of the international order, recognized by a handful of nations. Kendai was the only institution of higher learning administered directly by the Manchukuo's governing authority, the State Council, which was dominated by Japanese officers. Kendai recruited male students of Japanese, Chinese, Korean, Taiwanese, Mongolian, and Russian backgrounds, and aimed to nurture a generation of leaders who would actualize the Pan-Asianist goal of "harmony among various peoples residing in Manchukuo," one of the founding principles of Manchukuo. Wartime relations between Japanese and non-Japanese are often framed in terms of binary narratives of resistance to or collaboration with Japanese imperialism. Assuming that national consciousness had firmly taken root in people's minds, most historians simply dismiss Japan's wartime discourse of Pan-Asianism as just another empty rationale for the domination of subject peoples by an imperial power, akin to the Anglo-American ‘white man's burden.’ Recent scholarship, however, has complicated the picture by identifying multiple and competing articulations of Pan-Asianism, while re-examining its effects on policy making and its reception by subject populations. My dissertation extends this effort by investigating actual practices of Pan-Asianism as experienced by Japanese and Asian students enrolled at a unique institution whose ideal was Asian unity on the basis of equality. Taking Kendai as a case study and uncovering the interactions that shaped relations below the level of the state, I attempt to demonstrate that the idealistic and egalitarian version of Pan-Asianism exercised considerable appeal even late into World War II.
author2 Vlastos, Stephen, 1943-
author_facet Vlastos, Stephen, 1943-
Hiruma Kishida, Yuka
author Hiruma Kishida, Yuka
author_sort Hiruma Kishida, Yuka
title Kenkoku University, 1938-1945: interrogating the praxis of Pan-Asianist ideology in Japanese occupied Manchuria
title_short Kenkoku University, 1938-1945: interrogating the praxis of Pan-Asianist ideology in Japanese occupied Manchuria
title_full Kenkoku University, 1938-1945: interrogating the praxis of Pan-Asianist ideology in Japanese occupied Manchuria
title_fullStr Kenkoku University, 1938-1945: interrogating the praxis of Pan-Asianist ideology in Japanese occupied Manchuria
title_full_unstemmed Kenkoku University, 1938-1945: interrogating the praxis of Pan-Asianist ideology in Japanese occupied Manchuria
title_sort kenkoku university, 1938-1945: interrogating the praxis of pan-asianist ideology in japanese occupied manchuria
publisher University of Iowa
publishDate 2013
url https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/6591
https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=8090&context=etd
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