At first glance, it seems improbable that a comparative study of early twentieth-century engagement between Korean and Japanese Buddhist orders could tell us much about larger issues regarding Japanese colonialism in Kor...
Where did the “empire” go in the history of postwar Japan? In postwar Japanese history, one finds a historiographical “amnesia of empire.” The Japanese empire lost its colonies all at once as a result of its defeat in Wo...
The manner in which the relationship between the colonial rule/period
and ‘modernity’ should be perceived has been a hot-button issue in studies on the colonial period in Korea. Particular attention has been paid by
so...
Mark S. Lovmo (2003). Further Investigation into the June 8, 1948 Bombing of Tokto Island. International Journal of Korean History, 4(1),
-. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-26279
Sign In Europub
For faster login or register use your social account.
Empire of the Dharma: Korean and Japanese Buddhism, 1877–1912. Hwansoo Ilmee Kim, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2012, xxvi
At first glance, it seems improbable that a comparative study of early twentieth-century engagement between Korean and Japanese Buddhist orders could tell us much about larger issues regarding Japanese colonialism in Kor...
Recent Trends and Future Prospects in the Study of Ancient Korean History
No Abstract
Guest Editor’s Introduction: Writing the “Empire” Back into the History of Postwar Japan
Where did the “empire” go in the history of postwar Japan? In postwar Japanese history, one finds a historiographical “amnesia of empire.” The Japanese empire lost its colonies all at once as a result of its defeat in Wo...
Raising the Issue of ‘Modernity’ : ‘Colonial modernity’ theory as advanced by Japanese Korean Studies scholars and the background thereof
The manner in which the relationship between the colonial rule/period and ‘modernity’ should be perceived has been a hot-button issue in studies on the colonial period in Korea. Particular attention has been paid by so...
India, Korea’s ‘Orient’ : Signs of Reproduced Orientalism
No Abstract