Synopsis
This volume of collected essays shows how and why racial theories have been popular in China and Japan since the late nineteenth century and continue to affect the human rights of minority peoples in those countries to this day.
London: Hurst, Honolulu: Hawaii University Press, 1997
Contents
1 Introduction
Frank Dikötter
2 Racial Discourse in China: Permutations and Continuities
Frank Dikötter
3 Imagining Boundaries of Blood: Zhang Binglin and the Invention of the Han 'Race' in Modern China
Chow Kai-wing
4 Youtai: The Myth of the 'Jew' in Modern China
Zhou Xun
5 Myths of Descent, Racial Nationalism and Ethnic Minorities in the People's Republic of China
Barry Sautman
6 Discourses of Race and Nation in pre-1945 Japan
Michael Weiner
7 'Same Language - Same Race': The Dilemma of Kanbun in the Modern Japan
Kazuki Sato
8 The Ainu and the Discourse of 'Race'
Richard Siddle
9 Rethinking Race for Manchukuo: Self and Other in a Colonial Context
Louise Young
10 Anti-Semitism in Japan: Its History and Current Implications
David Goodman
11 The Discourse on Blood and Racial Identity on Contemporary in Japan
Yoshino Kosaku