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Japan and Britain in Shanghai, 1925-31

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ISBN-10: 0333643240

ISBN-13: 9780333643242

Edition: 1995

Authors: Harumi Goto-Shibata

List price: $169.99
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Description:

In Shanghai of 1925, the shooting of Chinese demonstrators by British policemen developed into a full-scale anti-British movement, while in 1932 Japan bombarded the Chinese areas of Shanghai. This text examines how the relations between China, Britain and Japan in Shanghai changed over time during the period. It investigates the economic aspect of history and businessmen's perceptions as well as the diplomatic and military aspects, because economic expansion was one of the most important objectives of Japan in the 1920s.
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Book details

List price: $169.99
Copyright year: 1995
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan Limited
Publication date: 11/17/1995
Binding: Hardcover
Pages: 196
Size: 5.51" wide x 8.50" long
Weight: 0.990
Language: English

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Introduction
The Background
The Shanghai International Settlement
The Far East after the First World War
The May Thirtieth Incident and Its Aftermath
The May Thirtieth Incident
From General Strike to Anti-British Boycott
Dissonance among the Powers
Japan's Stance on International Co-operation
Britain's Reaction to the Separate Settlement
Opinions of the Japanese
The British Stance in 1926
The Northern Expedition and Shanghai
The Defence of Shanghai
The Nanking Incident and the Criticism of Shidehara's Policy
The First Shantung Expedition
The Chinese Anti-foreign Movement
Role Reversal
Change in Britain's Stance
The Tsinan Incident
Britain's Stance Immediately after the Tsinan Incident
The Unification of China
The Anti-Japanese Boycott in Shanghai
Japanese Perceptions of the Boycott
Japan's Efforts to Co-operate with Britain
The New Government in Nanking
Sluggish Sino-Japanese Relations and the Anti-Japanese Boycott
British Opinions on the Anti-Japanese Boycott
The Japanese Perception of the Boycott
The Temporary End of the Anti-Japanese Boycott
The Great Depression and the Trade Situation in Shanghai
The Policies of Nanking and the Japanese in Shanghai
Towards the Shanghai Incident
The Revival of the Anti-Japanese Boycott after the Wanpaoshan and Korean Incidents
The Japanese in Shanghai, the Navy and the Diplomats
Opinions of the British in Shanghai
From the Manchurian Incident to the Shanghai Incident
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index