著者
黄 逸
出版者
関西大学大学院東アジア文化研究科
雑誌
文化交渉 : Journal of the Graduate School of East Asian Cultures : 東アジア文化研究科院生論集 (ISSN:21874395)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.7, pp.319-336, 2017-11-30

Japanese research on the Iwakura Mission can be divided into two stages, namely that of pre and post Second World War. The work of the pre-war period focused on the two fields of diplomatic and economic history. The post-war period has shown much more diversification and internationalization, especially in the field of comparative history of thought and cultures. Research into the Burlingame Mission to the late Qing China began in the United States, and also included the results of Japanese scholars. Research into the history of China-US relations undertaken in the People's Republic of China have also born fruit. Chinese scholars have made achievements building upon the work of their American counterparts. Recently a new "shared history" approach, aimed at reinterpreting the history of China-US relations has attempted to provide a completely new and transnational historical approach to the study of the Burlingame Mission. This paper will investigate the various secondary literature on both the Iwakura and Burlingame Missions in order to understand the historical development of research in this area.
著者
黄 逸
出版者
関西大学大学院東アジア文化研究科
雑誌
文化交渉 東アジア文化研究科院生論集 (ISSN:21874395)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.6, pp.85-98, 2016-11-30

東アジアの思想と構造It is generally considered that the eastward expansion of German influence in Japan began in the Edo period. The Japanese first became aware of Germany through the introduction of Rangaku studies ("Dutch Learning"). At that time, German doctors, through their exchange with their Japanese counterparts,popularized the accomplishments of western medicine that had been developing since the European Renaissance. The Japanese who studied Dutch learning in order to learn western medicine, may have also been exposed to the German language through Dutch language texts. Dutch Learning in the Edo Period notonly promoted the development of modern western medicine in Japan at the time, but also laid the foundations for the introduction of German science during the Bakumatsu and early Meiji periods. This paper discusses the early process of cultural interaction between Japan and Germany in the Edo Period based on Dutch Learning, in order to demonstrate the influence of German scholarship on the modernization of Japan.
著者
黄 逸
出版者
関西大学東西学術研究所
雑誌
関西大学東西学術研究所紀要 = Bulletin of the Institute of Oriental and Occidental Studies, Kansai University (ISSN:02878151)
巻号頁・発行日
no.53, pp.121-138, 2020-04

The embassy of the Chinese Empire under the direction of Mr.Anson Burlingame, the former U.S. Minister to Beijing (1862-1867), visited the United States of America in 1868. Four years later in 1872, the Japanese Imperial Minister Tomomi Iwakura led his embassy to America, too. As the first official Mission from China and Japan respectively, they received warm attention from the American newspapers. The media's reports and comments on the two embassies were generally full of goodwill, reflecting the kind of special amicable relationship between the post-Civil War United States who was engaging in the Reconstruction and its remote partners who were promoting modern reforms in East Asia after their respective civil wars. This paper intends to examine the two questions : why the U.S. newspapers around 1870 made such favorable reports, and what were the expectations of the reporters on the future U.S.-China and U.S.-Japan relations.