The New Japanese Peril
Title | The New Japanese Peril PDF eBook |
Author | Sidney Osborne |
Publisher | |
Pages | 202 |
Release | 1921 |
Genre | Eastern question (Far East) |
ISBN |
Yellow Peril!
Title | Yellow Peril! PDF eBook |
Author | John Kuo Wei Tchen |
Publisher | Verso Books |
Pages | 401 |
Release | 2014-02-11 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 1781681236 |
From invading hordes to enemy agents, a great fear haunts the West! The “yellow peril” is one of the oldest and most pervasive racist ideas in Western culture—dating back to the birth of European colonialism during the Enlightenment. Yet while Fu Manchu looks almost quaint today, the prejudices that gave him life persist in modern culture. Yellow Peril! is the first comprehensive repository of anti-Asian images and writing, and it surveys the extent of this iniquitous form of paranoia. Written by two dedicated scholars and replete with paintings, photographs, and images drawn from pulp novels, posters, comics, theatrical productions, movies, propagandistic and pseudo-scholarly literature, and a varied world of pop culture ephemera, this is both a unique and fascinating archive and a modern analysis of this crucial historical formation.
Soft Power and Its Perils
Title | Soft Power and Its Perils PDF eBook |
Author | Takeshi Matsuda |
Publisher | Stanford University Press |
Pages | 422 |
Release | 2007 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 9780804700405 |
An examination of the cultural aspects of U.S.-Japan relations during the postwar Occupation and the early Cold War
The White Peril in the Far East
Title | The White Peril in the Far East PDF eBook |
Author | Sidney Lewis Gulick |
Publisher | |
Pages | 200 |
Release | 1905 |
Genre | Eastern question (Far East) |
ISBN |
Biotic Borders
Title | Biotic Borders PDF eBook |
Author | Jeannie N. Shinozuka |
Publisher | University of Chicago Press |
Pages | 313 |
Release | 2022-04-20 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 0226817334 |
"This timely book reveals how the increase in traffic of transpacific plants, insects, and peoples raised fears of a "biological yellow peril" beginning in the late nineteenth century, when mass quantities of nursery stock and other agricultural products were shipped from large, corporate nurseries in Japan to meet the growing demand for exotics in the United States. Jeannie Shinozuka marshals extensive research to explain how the categories of "native" and "invasive" defined groups as bio-invasions that must be regulated-or somehow annihilated-during a period of American empire-building. Shinozuka shows how the modern fixation on foreign species provided a linguistic and conceptual arsenal for anti-immigration movements that gained ground in the early twentieth century. Xenophobia fed concerns about biodiversity, and in turn facilitated the implementation of plant quarantine measures while also valuing, and devaluing, certain species over others. The emergence and rise of economic entomology and plant pathology alongside public health and anti-immigration movements was not merely coincidental. Ultimately, what this book unearths is that the inhumane and unjust incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II cannot, and should not, be disentangled from this longer history"--
"Yellow Peril"
Title | "Yellow Peril" PDF eBook |
Author | Richard Jaccoma |
Publisher | |
Pages | 383 |
Release | 1978 |
Genre | Adventure stories |
ISBN | 9780399900075 |
Consuming Japan
Title | Consuming Japan PDF eBook |
Author | Andrew C. McKevitt |
Publisher | UNC Press Books |
Pages | 289 |
Release | 2017-08-31 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 1469634481 |
This insightful book explores the intense and ultimately fleeting moment in 1980s America when the future looked Japanese. Would Japan's remarkable post–World War II economic success enable the East Asian nation to overtake the United States? Or could Japan's globe-trotting corporations serve as a model for battered U.S. industries, pointing the way to a future of globalized commerce and culture? While popular films and literature recycled old anti-Asian imagery and crafted new ways of imagining the "yellow peril," and formal U.S.-Japan relations remained locked in a holding pattern of Cold War complacency, a remarkable shift was happening in countless local places throughout the United States: Japanese goods were remaking American consumer life and injecting contemporary globalization into U.S. commerce and culture. What impact did the flood of billions of Japanese things have on the ways Americans produced, consumed, and thought about their place in the world? From autoworkers to anime fans, Consuming Japan introduces new unorthodox actors into foreign-relations history, demonstrating how the flow of all things Japanese contributed to the globalizing of America in the late twentieth century.