The China of Tomorrow: Japan and the Limits of Victorian Expansion |
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Authors: | Robert S. G. Fletcher |
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Affiliation: | 1. University of Warwick, Coventry, UKr.fletcher.1@warwick.ac.ukhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-5893-0572 |
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Abstract: | ABSTRACTThis article contributes to the literature on the mechanisms, rhetoric, and limits of mid-Victorian expansion by asking how far late Tokugawa Japan was subject to forms of British imperialism. In September 1862 a British merchant was murdered on the high road between Edo and Kyoto; a year later, a British fleet bombarded Kagoshima in retaliation. By engaging with John Darwin’s concept of the ‘bridgehead’, this article examines the circumstances in which a lonely death on the frontiers of British commerce could be transformed into a Victorian ‘outrage’. It considers what we stand to gain by bringing an imperial history perspective to bear on what remains, for most imperial historians, a largely forgotten conflict. In positing Yokohama as a bridgehead that could gain only fitful purchase in London, it asks new questions about the conduct of ‘gunboat diplomacy’ and the fault lines of mid-Victorian expansion; the place of Japan in British political imaginaries; the nature of informal empire; and the discourses buffeting British expansion in the turbulent 1860s. |
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Keywords: | Japan East Asia Namamugi incident British imperialism Meiji restoration bridgehead treaty ports Yokohama Kagoshima informal empire |
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