The Japanese Empire and Latin America / / ed. by Pedro Iacobelli, Sidney Xu Lu.

The Japanese Empire and Latin America provides a comprehensive analysis of the complicated relationship between Japanese migration and capital exportation to Latin America and the rise and fall of the empire in the Asia-Pacific region. It explains how Japan’s presence influenced the cultures and soc...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter EBOOK PACKAGE COMPLETE 2023 English
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Place / Publishing House:Honolulu : : University of Hawaii Press, , [2023]
©2023
Year of Publication:2023
Language:English
Online Access:
Physical Description:1 online resource (280 p.) :; 13 b&w illustrations
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Table of Contents:
  • Frontmatter
  • Contents
  • Introduction
  • 1 Turning the Water into Fair Pools: Prewar Japan’s Paternalistic Outreach in Its South American Emigration Policy
  • 2 Japanese Shipping Lines in Latin America, 1905–1941
  • 3 Toward a Prototype of the Total Empire: Japanese Migration to Brazil and Japanese Colonial Expansion in Asia, 1921–1934
  • 4 Transpacific Migration and Japan’s Extraterritorial Settler Colonialism in the US-Mexican Borderlands
  • 5 The Immigrant-Homeland Connection: The Development of the Japanese Community in Peru
  • 6 Guiding Settlers: The Overseas Development Company and the Recruitment of Rural Brazil, 1918–1936
  • 7 “South America Bound”: Japanese Settler Colonist Fiction of the Meiji Era
  • 8 Chasing the Transnational Flow of Books and Magazines: Materials, Knowledge, and Network
  • 9 Immigrant Propaganda: Translating Japanese Imperial Ideology into Argentine Nationalism
  • 10 After the Empire: Postwar Emigration to the Dominican Republic and Economic Diplomacy
  • 11 Were Issei in Brazil Imperialists? Emigration-Driven Expansionism in Nikkei Literature
  • Bibliography
  • Contributors
  • Index