
audiobook
JAPAN AND THE PACIFIC, AND A JAPANESE VIEW OF THE EASTERN QUESTION.
PREFACE.
CONTENTS.
LIST OF MAPS.
PART I. JAPAN AND THE PACIFIC.
PART II. THE EASTERN QUESTION.
The author, a Japanese scholar writing for an English audience, seeks to explain why Japan’s rising power matters not only to his own country but also to Britain’s far‑east interests. He acknowledges the challenges of expressing complex geopolitical ideas across languages, yet hopes his observations will inspire both Japanese and English readers alike. The first part of the work examines Japan’s position in the Pacific, its resources, and how its rapid development could influence the balance of power. It also highlights the strategic importance of alliances, trade routes, and emerging competition with other colonial powers.
The second part turns to the broader “Eastern Question,” tracing the historical rivalry between England and Russia from Eastern Europe through Central Asia to the Pacific. By reviewing centuries of diplomatic maneuvers, treaties, and wars, the book shows how events in one region inevitably ripple outward. Throughout, the author blends personal travel notes with scholarly research, offering a nuanced Japanese perspective on the forces shaping the world at the close of the nineteenth century.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (290K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2020-01-07
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1861–1908
A Meiji-era diplomat and political thinker, he wrote vividly about Japan’s place in Asia and the Pacific while serving abroad. His work is especially remembered for arguing an outward-looking vision of Japanese strategy at a moment of rapid change.
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