Results 151 to 160 of about 716 (198)
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Manchukuo Melancholy:

2020
Li Zhengzhong (pen name Ke Ju) (b. 1921) and Zhang Xingjuan (penname Zhu Ti)(1923-2012) are Chinese writers who established prominent careers in Manchukuo; together, they comprise one couple of the “Northeast’s four famous husband-wife writers.” This chapter outlines their personal lives and important elements of their professional
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The Manchukuo Mongolian Army

Inner Asia, 2022
Abstract Among the core elements of the Manchukuo Military, a puppet force created in northeast China in 1932 by the Japanese Kwantung army, were units from eastern Inner Mongolia, also known as the Xing’an province. These Inner Mongols played a role in the Manchukuo Military far beyond their ratio of the total population, and many of the military ...
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Luo Tuosheng and Manchukuo Literature:

2020
This chapter utilizes newly discovered historical records and literary materials from China and Japan to investigate questions about Luo Tuosheng, a Manchukuo overseas student in imperial Japan, examining his identity, literary activities in Japan, and imprisonment.
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From Manchukuo to Marriage

2020
This chapter offers a historical background of Japanese–Chinese cross-border marriages and investigates the ways current cross-border marriages are rendered comprehensible in light of history. It demonstrates that the notion of familiarity embedded and enacted within the Japanese–Chinese marriages examined here is enfolded in multiple layers of ...
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From Meiji through Manchukuo

2020
Chapter 1 traces the historical development of Japan’s interest in Sino-Muslims and is framed within the broader intellectual interest in both Islam and religion that began in the late Meiji period (1868-1912). This discussion provides a sense of the methods and logic behind Japan’s increasingly coherent Islamic policy throughout the Taishō Era (1912 ...
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The Effect of the Non-Recognition of Manchukuo

American Political Science Review, 1934
When the United States government, on January 7, 1932, and the Extraordinary Assembly of the League of Nations, on March 11, 1932, and again on February 24, 1933, invoked non-recognition as a sanction,1 the necessity at once arose of determining what would be the precise effects, as far as international relations are concerned, of withholding ...
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A Visit to Manchukuo

The Geographical Journal, 1933
E. M. G., H. G. W. Woodhead
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