ABSTRACT

Over the past forty years, East Asia has been radically transformed from a war-damaged sub-continent to a region of global pre-eminence. With new, highly developed scientific resources, great economic strengths, significant global trading links and equally powerful financial resources, East Asia is now one of the most dynamic regions in the global system.

This book illuminates the historical development trajectory and contemporary circumstances of the countries of the region. Embracing a cross-disciplinary perspective, it summarises the history of the region and goes on to focus upon the rise of East Asia since the ruins of the Pacific War. Analysing the region’s basic strengths and the distinctive elite development strategies across the various countries, it also examines areas of domestic, intra-regional and international conflict. It covers the basic ground of political economy, society, culture and politics, whilst also taking care to locate the contemporary region in its own history and asking, what further change can be expected in the future?

Providing an excellent introduction to the study of the region, this book is an important read for students and scholars of East Asian politics, history and development.

part I|48 pages

Complex change and the logics of forms of life

chapter 1|17 pages

Argument making in social science

chapter 2|12 pages

Substantive approaches

The resources of current disciplines

chapter 3|17 pages

Grasping the core logics of forms of life

part II|44 pages

The shift to the modern world in East Asia

chapter 4|25 pages

Colonialism and modernity

The overall trajectory

chapter 5|17 pages

Colonialism and modernity

Disentangling the issues

part III|78 pages

Successor elites and the pursuit of national development

chapter 6|19 pages

The dissolution of state-empires

chapter 7|16 pages

The formation of successor elites

chapter 8|14 pages

Elites and masses

Domestic power, authority and dissent

chapter 9|27 pages

Development issues faced

part IV|32 pages

East Asia in the changing global system

chapter 10|15 pages

Three spheres of concern

Domestic, regional and international

part V|75 pages

East Asia

chapter |2 pages

Afterword