Making Borders in Modern East Asia

Making Borders in Modern East Asia

  • Nianshen Song
Publisher:Cambridge University PressISBN 13: 9781316800447ISBN 10: 131680044X

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Making Borders in Modern East Asia is written by Nianshen Song and published by Cambridge University Press. It's available with International Standard Book Number or ISBN identification 131680044X (ISBN 10) and 9781316800447 (ISBN 13).

Until the late nineteenth century, the Chinese-Korean Tumen River border was one of the oldest, and perhaps most stable, state boundaries in the world. Spurred by severe food scarcity following a succession of natural disasters, from the 1860s, countless Korean refugees crossed the Tumen River border into Qing-China's Manchuria, triggering a decades-long territorial dispute between China, Korea, and Japan. This major new study of a multilateral and multiethnic frontier highlights the competing state- and nation-building projects in the fraught period that witnessed the Sino-Japanese War, the Russo-Japanese War, and the First World War. The power-plays over land and people simultaneously promoted China's frontier-building endeavours, motivated Korea's nationalist imagination, and stimulated Japan's colonialist enterprise, setting East Asia on an intricate trajectory from the late-imperial to a situation that, Song argues, we call modern.