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Current Trends in Japanese Studies of China and Adjacent Areas
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 March 2011
Extract
This article, like Marius Jansen's “Notes on Japanese Universities” (FEQ 12.2), has been prepared to acquaint Western scholars with significant developments in Japanese studies during the postwar period. It is organized on a different basis from Jansen's article, however, and is limited to studies of China (especially North China), Manchuria, Mongolia, Central Asia and Korea. Since complete coverage is out of the question in an article of this length, we concentrate on historical studies but also include significant advances in the humanities and to a certain extent in the social sciences.
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- Copyright © Association for Asian Studies, Inc. 1953
References
1 Others: Shiratori Kurakichi, Ichimura Sanjirō, Kuwabara Jitsuzō, and Naitō Torajirō (or Konan).
2 Cf. L. S. Yang's review of The History of Early Modem China in FEQ 12 (1953) 208–209.
3 Cf. L. S. Yang's review of Niida's history of Chinese status law in FEQ 11 (1952) 384–386.
4 Cf. the review by A. F. Wright in HJAS 7 (1943) 261–266.
5 Cf. the review by Richard K. Beardsley elsewhere in this issue.