Koreans in Japan

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    The Korean War was the first major ‘proxy war’ of the Cold War, and was relatively significant to the development of the Cold War due to a number of factors. Overall it can be seen as a clear example of the United States’ policy of containment in action, leading to the vast growth of America’s military capability, as well as the globalisation of the Cold War due to the military alliances constructed by the US. Along with this, the Korean War ended with the emergence of China as the frontrunner of

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    outbreak of the Korean war, US secretary of state Dean Acheson, declared that the US had no interest in Korea as it had no geopolitical significance. Korea having been divided after WWII as a result of Japanese occupation, was occupied in the northern half by Chinese communist forces. Following Acheson 's decleration that the US did not posess interest in the Korean pennisnular, the North Korean Communist government in Pyongyang orchestrated an attack on Southen Korea. North Korean forces, backed

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    Background United States’ formal occupation of Japan began to end with the implementation of the 1947 Post-War Constitution. The new constitution, founded on liberal and democratic institutions, also called for military restriction, similar to the post-war constitution adopted in Germany. Chapter II, Renunciation of War, contains the famous peace clause, Article 9. Article 9 states, “Japanese people forever renounce war as a sovereign right of the nation and the threat or use of force as means of

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    On 25 June 1950, North Korean troops poured across the 38th parallel of the Korean peninsula, to invade South Korea. Soon, a U.S. led United Nations force intervened on behalf South Korea, which prompted The Peoples Republic of China, and to a lesser extent the Soviet Union, to intervene on behalf of North Korea. What followed was three years of bloody combat, until an armistice was signed on 27 July 1953. In the minds of most people, that was the end of it. The Korean conflict was soon overshadowed

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    states. However, the differences in how Japan and the United States, respectively, ruled over them are stark. Government, religion, education, and nationalism all played important roles in both systems, but how those roles affected the nation as a whole differ in comparison. In this essay I will compare the two systems of colonization and examine the similarities and differences in the approaches taken by the colonizers in their method of controlling both Japan and Korea. When the Philippines came under

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    Self-Images By Oguma

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    publication of this book, there was a generally accepted narrative among liberal scholars that the pre-war Japanese Empire and its people believed in the myth of homogeneity, which was supposedly the source of their colonialism, discrimination against Koreans and Chinese and their military aggression in WW2. According to Oguma’s extensive analysis of government policies, academic debates and news articles from the Meiji to post-WW2 periods, he convincingly argues that the dominant narrative regarding

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    Cultural Awareness: Japanese Culture Analysis Japan is the region of the world focused on in this research essay. The author will define culture, and describe Japanese cultural traits with an emphasis on leadership competency. The thesis statement hypothesizes that cultural study and research of specific regions of the world will enable cross-cultural competence and comprehension in leadership roles. There are a plethora of definitions which encompass culture. Dictionary.com Unabridged (2017)

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    Silla Essay

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    How international was the unification war of Korean peninsular by Silla? The greatest period for Silla came in the 6th century. Founded in the southeast of the Korean Peninsula in the first century BCE, Silla remained the weakest of the three Korean kingdoms up until the early 6th century, whereupon it began to grow rapidly on the strength of a series of political reforms. In the mid 6th century, Silla rulers launched ambitious military expeditions to expand their territory with the avowed objective

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    bodies, collect their excrement, and convert this into fertilizer for increased agricultural production” (Henry 668). Japan displaced most of the Koreans outside the prospective tourist and immigration location: “to effectively present Seoul as “salubrious,” “modern,” and “progressive,” Japanese guides to the capital city selectively display “stagnant” part of city inhabited by Koreans” (Henry 669). Certain regulations and punishments were in need to enforce these ideals of the colonizer: flogging,

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    against Russian land. Russia and Japan each had their empires butting up against each other while being mostly without defined border. The issues could be taken back since 1792 when the Russia wanted to create a trading post in Japan and Japan refused to do so. They would not hear of it since they viewed it as Russia attempting to encroach and gain a foothold in mainland Japan. As the years passed, Russia tried multiple times to make an agreement but the Shogun of Japan still would not budge, especially

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