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DB: BASE de DATOS, Biblioteca del Centro Cultural de la Embajada de Japon
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作成日:2019/07/22 03:58:21 JST最終更新日:2019/08/04 03:04:32 JST
RUBRO HISTORIA
TITULO Understanding History in Asia (What Diplomatic Documents Reveal) (★)
AUTOR Hattori Ryuji
EDITORIAL JPIC (*)
ISBN 978-4-86658-054-8
IDIOMA INGLES
CODIGO INTERNO HA-0179
NOTA (*)(Japan Publishing Industry Foundation for Culture) (★)(The twentieth century has been called a century of war. Wars and colonization leave deep chasms between countries. In the case of Japan, these frictions have manifested themselves as historical issues. The history since World War II has also been a history of trying to overcome the hostility surrounding these issues. Since the end of the war there have been various attempts at reconciliation, and indeed, periods in which Japan has enjoyed good relations with China and also with South Korea. Despite that, historical issues have overheated in the twenty-first century, and their effects may extend beyond Japan´s relations with China and South Korea to impact its relations with the United States, Southeast Asia, and Europe. This title examines first, in the introduction, the period from the Tokyo Military Tribunal to the normalization of relations between Japan and South Korea and between Japan and China. In chapter one, it explores an issue that arose regarding Japanese history textbooks and a statement released by Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Miyazawa Kiichi, South Korean President Chun Doo-hwan´s visit to Japan, and ´mutual trust´ between Japanese Prime Minister Nakasone Yasuhiro and Chinese Communist Party General Secretary Hu Yaobang. Chapter two reveals the view of the Chinese side and behind-the-scenes negotiations that evolved around Prime Minister Nakasone´s official visit to Yasukuni Shrine. Chapter three delves into the wartime ´comfort women´ issue, including Japanese Prime Minister Miyazawa Kiichi´s visit to South Korea and statements made by Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Kato Kooichi and Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Koono Yoohei. Chapter four takes up the statement released by Japanese Prime Minister Murayama Tomiichi on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the end of World War II and discusses how the statement has become a kind of common language within Japanese politics. Chapter five considers issues that have arisen in the twenty-first century and the epilogue provides observations about the prospects for these areas in the future. ◆Hattori Ryuuji was born in Tokyo in 1968. He holds a bachelor´s degree from Kyoto University´s Faculty of Law and a doctorate in political science from Kobe University. He taught at Chiba University and Takushoku University prior to assuming his current position as professor in Chuo University´s Faculty of Policy Studies in 2010.)

   

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