Knowledge Production in Cold War Asia
US Hegemony and Local Agency
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Product details:
- Publisher Indiana University Press
- Date of Publication 1 April 2025
- ISBN 9780253072054
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages348 pages
- Size 229x152 mm
- Weight 635 g
- Language English
- Illustrations 2 b&w photos 592
Categories
Long description:
"
From the end of the Second World War to the early 1970s, new paradigms began to form in academic, scientific, and professional knowledge in various disciplines and fields—not only in the United States, but also in East Asia.
Drawing on a wealth of archival documents from East Asia, Knowledge Production in Cold War Asia focuses on the building and rebuilding of these different forms of knowledge in or about East Asia during the first half of the Cold War. It explores how this newly constructed knowledge came to assume certain ""norms"" professionals and bureaucrats of these countries tried to comply with and sometimes wrestled with. The essays within this collection explore a wide variety of this knowledge production: state-centered promotions of construction and normalization of knowledge; the ways in which non-state actors were involved in the construction and normalization of knowledge; and how individuals and groups who resisted or protested the hegemonic knowledge were constructed by state or non-state actors.
A distinctive look at the Cold War through the research and perspectives of scholars from East Asia, Knowledge Production in Cold War Asia insightfully highlights the role of knowledge production, normalization, and resistance in the Cold War era, contributing to a fuller understanding of international relations.
Table of Contents:
Acknowledgments
Introduction, by Yuka Tsuchiya Moriguchi, Shin Kawashima, and Somei Kobayashi
Part I: Area Studies
1. The United States and Taiwanese Sinology during the Cold War: The Ford Foundation and the Institute of Modern History, Academia Sinica, by Shin Kawashima
2. Cold War Collaborations: Japanese Studies in the United States, 1945–1960, by Miriam Kingsberg Kadia
3. Debates on Modernization Theory at the Hakone Conference: Discrepancies in Value Systems and Perspectives on History, by Masaki Fujioka
4. The Dawn of Korean Studies and Knowledge Production on Korea during and after the Pacific War, by Somei Kobayashi
Part II: Scientific Knowledge
5. The Emergence of China's Nuclear Research: Between the Civil War and the Cold War, by Yuko Sato
6. The Michigan Memorial Phoenix Project and Taiwan: Nuclear Technological Aid by a US Public University, by Yuka Tsuchiya Moriguchi
7. Rediscovery of a Cold War Space: The Politics of Science in the DMZ Ecological Survey, by Manyong Moon
Part III: Practicing Knowledge
8. US Aid, Journalism Education in Taiwan, and a Transnational Network of Chinese-Speaking Journalists, by Mike Shichi Lan
9. The Cold War, US International Educational Exchange, and the Development of Hong Kong's Journalism and Communication Education, by Yang Zhang
10. US Educational Exchange Programs for Foreign Journalists and Changes in South Korean Journalism, by Jae Young Cha
11. Civic Action as Counterinsurgency in South Korea: Cold War at the Grassroots within and beyond the National Borders, by Eun Heo
Index