ABSTRACT

In the twenty-first century, East Asia has been increasingly marked both by tensions at a government level and a chauvinistic mood among the polity. While China’s rise is in one respect the proximate driver of these changes in tone, it draws on a range of unresolved grievances among the respective historical narratives of Mainland China, Taiwan, Japan and the Koreas. These conflicting views of the region’s past are a crucial barrier to its cohesive and stable future.

This book brings together East Asian scholars from a range of academic disciplines, including China historians, political historians and political scientists to illuminate the interconnectedness of East Asia and discuss how a shared historical narrative might be constructed. Their contributions are organised into 3 parts focusing respectively on historical narratives of China, historical narratives of East Asia, and reconciling historical narratives.

The book will appeal to researcher interested in the historical narratives of international relations in East Asia.

part |20 pages

General introduction

part III|48 pages

Toward a generally accepted historical narrative in East Asia

chapter 9|17 pages

Questioning the “empireness” of national history

East Asian history narrated in Korea, China, and Japan

chapter |1 pages

Afterword