Qingmo de Zhongri hezuo: Riben Hengbin datong xuexiao wei yanjiu duixiang [Sino-Japanese Cooperation in the Late Qing Dynasty: The Datong School in Yokohama]

Craig Smith

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

Abstract

The establishment of the Datong Schools in Yokohama and Tokyo is a symbol of Chinese intellectual efforts to confront the crisis brought on by Western imperialism. Unable to bring about meaningful reform in China, they turned to Japan as a place in which they could both effectively study the so-called 'New Learning' as well as train a new generation to bring China into modernity without losing them to the West. These few years represent a period of Sino-Japanese elite cooperation in which a Confucian-centered Asian modernity was imagined. This article examines the Datong Schools as sites of cooperation, considering the efforts of early Japanese Asianists and pro-Japanese reformers from China to create a modem educated Chinese youth within the framework of this modernity in order to save China and East Asia from Western imperialism.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationOut of Bounds Sinophone Perspectives on Chinese Cultural History
EditorsDavid Der-wei Wang
Place of PublicationTaiwan
PublisherDepartment of Chinese Literature National Chung Cheng University
Pages225-247
Volume1
EditionFirst
ISBN (Print)978-986-89620-7-1
Publication statusPublished - 2017

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