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Table of Contents
Preface; Contents; Editors ; Contributors ; Part I ; Chapter 1: America Encounters Japan, 1836-94; Ending Japan's Policy of Seclusion; Commodore Perry and the Treaty of Kanagawa; Townsend Harris and the Opening of Japan to Commerce; The Treaty Revision and the First Sino-Japanese War; The Meiji Restoration and the Birth of Modern Japan; The Quest for Treaty Revisions under Terashima Munenori; The Quest for Treaty Revisions under Inoue Kaoru; The Quest for Treaty Revisions under Ōkuma Shigenobu; Quest Partially Fulfilled: The Abolishment of Extraterritoriality.
Concluding the First Sino-Japanese WarBibliography; Chapter 2: The Emergence of Japan on the Global Stage, 1895-1908; East Asia and the Pacific in the Late 1800s; Repercussions of the Triple Intervention; The Boxer Rebellion and the Anglo-Japanese Alliance; The Russo-Japanese War and America's Support; Ending the War: The Portsmouth Peace Conference; Japan's Role in Shaping US Policy Toward East Asia; Japan's Postwar Diplomacy; Japan's Three Approaches to Diplomacy; The Diplomatic Approach of Komura and Hayashi; The Problem of Race and Immigration; President Roosevelt Diffuses the Crisis.
The White Fleet and the Return of Amicable RelationsBibliography; Chapter 3: The Great War and Shifting Relations, 1909-19; Dollar Diplomacy and Ensuing Economic Rivalry; The State Department's Shifting East Asian Policy; Shifting Bilateral Relations; Reemergence of the Race Issue: 1913 California Alien Land Law; The Revolution in China and the Great War; Japan's Entry into the Great War; Japan's Diplomatic Blunder: The Twenty-One Demands; Wilson's Vision for a Postwar International Order; The Ishii-Lansing Agreement and the Siberian Intervention.
American and Japanese Objectives at the Paris Peace ConferenceThe Reemergence of the Race Issue; Bibliography; Chapter 4: The 1920s: The Washington Treaty System and the Immigration Issue; Financial Cooperation in China: The New Four-UPower Banking Consortium; The Washington Naval Conference and the Triple Treaties; The Immigration Problem and US-Japan Relations; The Morris-Shidehara Talks and the Road to Japanese Exclusion; The China Problem and US-Japan Relations; The Nanjing Nationalist Government; The 1929 Sino-Soviet Conflict and the London Naval Conference; The London Naval Conference.
Concluding the First Sino-Japanese WarBibliography; Chapter 2: The Emergence of Japan on the Global Stage, 1895-1908; East Asia and the Pacific in the Late 1800s; Repercussions of the Triple Intervention; The Boxer Rebellion and the Anglo-Japanese Alliance; The Russo-Japanese War and America's Support; Ending the War: The Portsmouth Peace Conference; Japan's Role in Shaping US Policy Toward East Asia; Japan's Postwar Diplomacy; Japan's Three Approaches to Diplomacy; The Diplomatic Approach of Komura and Hayashi; The Problem of Race and Immigration; President Roosevelt Diffuses the Crisis.
The White Fleet and the Return of Amicable RelationsBibliography; Chapter 3: The Great War and Shifting Relations, 1909-19; Dollar Diplomacy and Ensuing Economic Rivalry; The State Department's Shifting East Asian Policy; Shifting Bilateral Relations; Reemergence of the Race Issue: 1913 California Alien Land Law; The Revolution in China and the Great War; Japan's Entry into the Great War; Japan's Diplomatic Blunder: The Twenty-One Demands; Wilson's Vision for a Postwar International Order; The Ishii-Lansing Agreement and the Siberian Intervention.
American and Japanese Objectives at the Paris Peace ConferenceThe Reemergence of the Race Issue; Bibliography; Chapter 4: The 1920s: The Washington Treaty System and the Immigration Issue; Financial Cooperation in China: The New Four-UPower Banking Consortium; The Washington Naval Conference and the Triple Treaties; The Immigration Problem and US-Japan Relations; The Morris-Shidehara Talks and the Road to Japanese Exclusion; The China Problem and US-Japan Relations; The Nanjing Nationalist Government; The 1929 Sino-Soviet Conflict and the London Naval Conference; The London Naval Conference.