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This study is the first to assess the combined significance of the English-language newspapers of China, Japan and Korea in the period 1918-45. It not only frames the English-language press networks in the international media history of East Asia but also relates them to media developments in the ‘British world’ linking Fleet Street to the Empire and Dominions, and to the rise of the United States as a broker of international opinion on and in the Asia-Pacific. The English-language newspapers occupied a narrow but significant segment of the public sphere in East Asia in the inter-war years. As forums of opinion on Japanese, Chinese and Western interests in East Asia, they also served as vehicles of propaganda, particularly during the crisis-ridden 1930's and the Pacific War. With this examination of the media affiliations, editorial line, and access to official bodies in East Asia and the West of most of the English-language newspapers published in East Asia in the period under review, the author demonstrates that these publications formed distinct networks in terms of the editorial positions they took vis-a-vis the key issues of the day, especially Japan’s imperial project in East Asia.
English newspapers --- Press --- Media, News --- Media, The --- News media --- Journalism --- Publicity --- Newspapers --- Periodicals --- History. --- East Asia --- Japan --- Foreign relations --- History --- J0960.80 --- Japan: Journalism -- history -- Gendai (1926- ), Shōwa period, 20th century --- Writing (Authorship) --- Literature --- Fake news
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Journalists --- Journalistes --- Biography --- Biographies --- Matsumoto, Shigeharu, --- Domei Tsushinsha --- Liberals --- J0960.80 --- J2284.80 --- J3380 --- Japan: Journalism -- history -- Gendai (1926- ), Shōwa period, 20th century --- Japan: Genealogy and biography -- biographies -- Gendai, modern (1926- ), Shōwa, 20th century --- Japan: History -- Gendai, modern, 20th century --- Dōmei Tsūshinsha --- Dōmei Tsūshinsha. --- Liberals - Japan - Biography --- Matsumoto, Shigeharu, - 1899-1989 --- Matsumoto, Shigeharu --- 松本重治
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Journalism --- Public opinion --- J0960.80 --- J4000.80 --- J4010 --- J4124 --- J4125 --- J4126 --- Writing (Authorship) --- Literature --- Publicity --- Fake news --- Political aspects --- History --- Social aspects --- Japan: Journalism -- history -- Gendai (1926- ), Shōwa period, 20th century --- Japan: Social history, history of civilization -- Gendai (1926- ), Shōwa period, 20th century --- Japan: Social sciences in general -- ideology, socio-political and socio-economic movements --- Japan: Sociology and anthropology -- public opinion --- Japan: Sociology and anthropology -- propaganda --- Japan: Sociology and anthropology -- media and (mass) communications
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A Diary of Darkness is one of the most important and compelling documents of wartime Japan. Between 1942 and 1945, the liberal journalist Kiyosawa Kiyoshi (1890-1945) kept at great personal risk a diary of his often subversive social and political observations and his personal struggles. The diary caused a sensation when it was published in Japan in 1948 and is today regarded as a classic. This is the first time it has appeared in English. Kiyosawa was an American-educated commentator on politics and foreign affairs who became increasingly isolated in Japan as militant nationalists rose to power. He began the diary as notes for a history of the war, but it soon became an "inadvertent autobiography" and a refuge for the bitter criticism of Japanese authoritarianism that he had to repress publicly. It chronicles growing bureaucratic control over everything from the press to people's clothing. Kiyosawa pours scorn on such leaders as Premiers Tojo and Koiso. He laments the rise of hysterical propaganda and relates his own and his friends' struggles to avoid arrest. He writes in gripping detail about increasing poverty, crime, and disorder. He records the sentiments of the local barber as faithfully as those of senior politicians. And all the while he traces the gradual disintegration of Japan's war effort and the looming certainty of defeat. A Diary of Darkness is a perceptive and courageous account of wartime Japan and a revealing record of the devastation wrought by total war.
World War, 1939-1945 --- Journalists --- Personal narratives, Japanese --- Diaries --- Kiyosawa, Kiyoshi, --- J3388 --- J4000.80 --- J2284.80 --- J0960.80 --- -Journalists --- -Columnists --- Commentators --- Authors --- European War, 1939-1945 --- Second World War, 1939-1945 --- World War 2, 1939-1945 --- World War II, 1939-1945 --- World War Two, 1939-1945 --- WW II (World War, 1939-1945) --- WWII (World War, 1939-1945) --- History, Modern --- Japan: History -- Gendai, modern -- Shōwa period -- World War II -- Pacific war (1941-1945) --- Japan: Social history, history of civilization -- Gendai (1926- ), Shōwa period, 20th century --- Japan: Genealogy and biography -- biographies -- Gendai, modern (1926- ), Shōwa, 20th century --- Japan: Journalism -- history -- Gendai (1926- ), Shōwa period, 20th century --- Kiyosawa, Kiyoshi, 1890-1945. --- -European War, 1939-1945 --- Columnists --- World War, 1939-1945 - Personal narratives, Japanese --- Journalists - Japan - Diaries --- Kiyosawa, Kiyoshi, - 1890-1945 --- -Personal narratives, Japanese --- Kiyosawa, Kiyoshi --- Diaries. --- Personal narratives, Japanese.
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