Thesis ID: CBB827878446

The Cartographic Steppe: Mapping Environment and Ethnicity in Japan's Imperial Borderlands (2016)

unapi

This dissertation traces one of the origins of the autonomous region system in the People’s Republic of China to the Japanese imperial project by focusing on Inner Mongolia in the 1930s. Here, Japanese technocrats demarcated the borderlands through categories of ethnicity and livelihood. At the center of this endeavor was the perceived problem of nomadic decline: the loss of the region’s deep history of transhumance to Chinese agricultural expansion and capitalist extraction. As Japanese occupiers and their collaborators witnessed the social costs of state-led modernization, they began to pursue radical solutions in ethnic cleansing and environmental engineering on the steppe. These chapters show how Japanese administrators strove to reconstitute the relationship between land and nomad through theories of Social Darwinism, Marxian materialism, and cooperative evolution—theories they translated into technologies of rule on the periphery. Nomadism, often cast as incompatible to modernity, actually became integral to its conceit for the empire. Maps acted as the primary idiom through which Japanese planners sought to visualize the borderlands. Using Japanese, Chinese, and Mongolian sources, the dissertation challenges the nation-based paradigms that have come to dominate the environmental history of East Asia. To view the colonies from afar as an extractive frontier removes us from environmental consequences of imperialism as much as it did for those living on the archipelago at the time. Rather, the social scientific theories and land surveying technologies, as discussed in these chapters, combined to disrupt the lives of hunters, herders, and farmers with environmental consequences that persisted into the postwar. As such, the dissertation brings together the seemingly irreconcilable histories of the Japanese empire and the People’s Republic. The narrative here addresses the problematic practice in the literature on Japanese imperialism of overlooking the Mongolian territories as empty space. It also serves as an alternate understanding to the beginnings of the multiethnic framework of the People’s Republic. Instead of only seeing the beginnings of Communist rule as forged in the fires of war against the Japanese, the dissertation also points to the significance of the occupation in shaping the ethnic and ecological bounds of modern China.

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Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB827878446/

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Authors & Contributors
Foliard, Daniel
Jin, Xiaoxing
Zhang, Baichun
Pratte, Anne-Sophie
Caroline Humphrey
Lee, Seok-Won
Journals
Medical History
Journal of the History of Biology
Journal of British Studies
Interdisciplinary Science Reviews
Imago Mundi: A Review of Early Cartography
Historia Scientiarum: International Journal of the History of Science Society of Japan
Publishers
Cambridge University Press
The University of Chicago Press
Chuo-koron
Routledge
Harvard University Asia Center
Harvard University
Concepts
Imperialism
Colonialism
Cartography
Japan, colonies
Science and politics
Maps; atlases
People
Tetsuji, Kada
Masamichi, Shinmei
Jōji, Ezawa
Masamichi, Rōyama
Yasuma, Takata
Forster-Cooper, Clive
Time Periods
20th century, early
19th century
Qing dynasty (China, 1644-1912)
18th century
17th century
Places
Japan
China
Mongolia
Korea
Great Britain
Manchuria
Institutions
Jesuits (Society of Jesus)
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