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Changing Frontiers and Invisible Politics in Northeast Asia: A Conversation with Tessa Morris-Suzuki
Tessa Morris-Suzuki 고려대학교 민족문화연구원 2018 Cross-Currents Vol.0 No.27
This is an edited and updated transcript of a November 2016 interview that was part of the Tianxia Podcast Series (http://www.chinoiresie.info/tessa-morris-suzuki-podcast-diamond-mountains/). The conversation transcribed here focuses on a discussion of Tessa Morris-Suzuki’s To the Diamond Mountains: A Hundred-Year Journey through China and Korea (2010), a travelogue based on a trip she took in 2009 to Northeast China, North Korea, and South Korea with the purpose of retracing the 1910 journey of the English adventurer and artist Emily Georgiana Kemp. We discuss the book in relation to the momentous transformations that have occurred over the long twentieth century in the areas visited by Kemp, and to the ways in which grassroots movements and new forms of survival politics are remaking Northeast Asia today.
Japan and its Region: Changing Historical Perceptions
Morris-Suzuki, Tessa 성균관대학교 동아시아학술원 2011 Sungkyun Journal of East Asian Studies Vol.10 No.2
The Northeast Asian region today stands at a crucial turning point. The rise of China and tensions on the Korean Peninsula pose challenges to Japan's relations with its region. The changing regional order has profound implications for the future of Japanese studies. In the context of contemporary changes, this article explores shifting visions of Japan's position within its region, particularly how they have been expressed by historians from the early twentieth century onward. Over the past two decades, new notions of space and society have challenged the traditional visions of "area" that underpinned much historical twentieth-century writing on Japan. This article argues that, in searching for new paradigms for understanding Japan's place in the region, historians can find valuable insights in the work of Japanese grassroots researchers of the 1970s and 1980s, who developed alternative frameworks for exploring their country's connections to other parts of Asia.
Japan and its Region: Changing Historical Perceptions
( Morris Suzuki Tessa ) 성균관대학교 동아시아학술원 2011 Sungkyun Journal of East Asian Studies Vol.11 No.2
The Northeast Asian region today stands at a crucial turning point. The rise of China and tensions on the Korean Peninsula pose challenges to Japan`s relations with its region. The changing regional order has profound implications for the future of Japanese studies. In the context of contemporary changes, this article explores shifting visions of Japan`s position within its region, particularly how they have been expressed by historians from the early twentieth century onward. Over the past two decades, new notions of space and society have challenged the traditional visions of area that underpinned much historical twentieth-century writing on Japan. This article argues that, in searching for new paradigms for understanding Japan`s place in the region, historians can find valuable insights in the work of Japanese grassroots researchers of the 1970s and 1980s, who developed alternative frameworks for exploring their country`s connections to other parts of Asia.