Japanese Racial Identities Within U.S.-Japan Relations, 1853-1919

Japanese Racial Identities Within U.S.-Japan Relations, 1853-1919

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Author/Contributor(s): Merida, Tarik
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Date: 02/21/2023
Binding: Hardcover
Condition: NEW

This book retraces the process through which, at the turn of the twentieth century, the Japanese went from a racial anomaly to honorary members of the White race. It explores the interpretation of the Japanese race by Western powers, particularly the United States, during Japan's ascension as a great power between 1853 and 1919. Forced to cope with this new element in the Far East, Western nations such as the U.S. had to device a negotiation zone in which they could accommodate the Japanese and negotiate their racial identity. In this book, Tarik Merida, presents a new tool to study this process of negotiation: the Racial Middle Ground.