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The Cultural Dimension of Sino-Japanese Relations: Essays on the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries (review)

The Cultural Dimension of Sino-Japanese Relations: Essays on the Nineteenth and Twentieth... The Cultural Dimension of Sino-Japanese Relations: Essays on the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries (review) John Allen Tucker China Review International, Volume 2, Number 2, Fall 1995, pp. 345-354 (Review) Published by University of Hawai'i Press DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/cri.1995.0086 For additional information about this article https://muse.jhu.edu/article/397397/summary Access provided at 18 Feb 2020 01:44 GMT from JHU Libraries FEATURES Joshua A. Fogel. The Cultural Dimension ofSino-Japanese Relations: Essays on the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries. Armonie, New York: M. E. Sharpe, 1994. vii, 216 pp. Hardcover $49.95. Paperback $18.95. An often-found flaw of East Asian scholarship is its ultimately nationalistic orien- tation. This flaw, however, is not infrequently mistaken as a virtue. Conventional wisdom thus suggests that respectable, serious scholars can be identified as either China, Japan, or Korea specialists while those lacking the linguistic and research skills to focus on the sources of one country become general practitioners of Asian studies. But the real giants in the jungle of Asian studies belie such facile wisdom: Edwin Reischauer, for example, studied Ennin PJt (793-864), a Japa- nese monk famous for the diary of his pilgrimage to late-Tang )H (618-907) China; Ryusaku Tsunoda and Carrington Goodrich pioneered research in Chi- nese historiography on Japan; http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png China Review International University of Hawai'I Press

The Cultural Dimension of Sino-Japanese Relations: Essays on the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries (review)

China Review International , Volume 2 (2) – Mar 30, 2011

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Publisher
University of Hawai'I Press
Copyright
Copyright © 1995 University of Hawai'i Press.
ISSN
1527-9367

Abstract

The Cultural Dimension of Sino-Japanese Relations: Essays on the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries (review) John Allen Tucker China Review International, Volume 2, Number 2, Fall 1995, pp. 345-354 (Review) Published by University of Hawai'i Press DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/cri.1995.0086 For additional information about this article https://muse.jhu.edu/article/397397/summary Access provided at 18 Feb 2020 01:44 GMT from JHU Libraries FEATURES Joshua A. Fogel. The Cultural Dimension ofSino-Japanese Relations: Essays on the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries. Armonie, New York: M. E. Sharpe, 1994. vii, 216 pp. Hardcover $49.95. Paperback $18.95. An often-found flaw of East Asian scholarship is its ultimately nationalistic orien- tation. This flaw, however, is not infrequently mistaken as a virtue. Conventional wisdom thus suggests that respectable, serious scholars can be identified as either China, Japan, or Korea specialists while those lacking the linguistic and research skills to focus on the sources of one country become general practitioners of Asian studies. But the real giants in the jungle of Asian studies belie such facile wisdom: Edwin Reischauer, for example, studied Ennin PJt (793-864), a Japa- nese monk famous for the diary of his pilgrimage to late-Tang )H (618-907) China; Ryusaku Tsunoda and Carrington Goodrich pioneered research in Chi- nese historiography on Japan;

Journal

China Review InternationalUniversity of Hawai'I Press

Published: Mar 30, 2011

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