(Source: Hong Kong University Press)
Hong Kong University Press has
published a new book on imperial violence, state destruction and the reordering
of modern East Asia in the aftermath of World War II.
ABOUT THE BOOK
In the Ruins of the Japanese
Empire concludes that early East Asian Cold War history needs to be
studied within the framework of post-imperial history. Japan’s surrender did
not mean that the Japanese and former imperial subjects would immediately
disavow imperial ideology. The end of the Japanese empire unleashed
unprecedented destruction and violence on the periphery. Lives were destroyed;
names of cities altered; collaborationist regimes—which for over a decade
dominated vast populations—melted into the air as policeman, bureaucrats,
soldiers, and technocrats offered their services as nationalists,
revolutionaries or communists. Power did not simply change hands swiftly and
smoothly. In the chaos of the new order, legal anarchy, revenge, ethnic
displacement, and nationalist resentments stalked the postcolonial lands of
northeast Asia, intensifying bloody civil wars in societies radicalized by
total war, militarization, and mass mobilization.
Kushner and Levidis’s volume
follows these processes as imperial violence reordered demographics and
borders, and involved massive political, economic, and social dislocation as
well as stubborn continuities. From the hunt for “traitors” in Korea and China
to the brutal suppression of the Taiwanese by the Chinese Nationalist
government in the long-forgotten February 28 Incident, the research shows how
the empire’s end acted as a catalyst for renewed attempts at state-building.
From the imperial edge to the metropole, investigations shed light on how
prewar imperial values endured during postwar Japanese rearmament and in party
politics. Nevertheless, many Japanese actively tried to make amends for wartime
transgressions and rebuild Japan’s posture in East Asia by cultivating
religious and cultural connections.
ABOUT THE EDITORS
Barak Kushner is professor of
East Asian history at Cambridge University. Andrew Levidis is lecturer in the
School of Language and Global Studies at the University of Central Lancashire.
The table of contents can be
found here
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