Other Great Game

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38th parallel
A01=Sheila Miyoshi Jager
Alfred Thayer Mahan
annexation
Author_Sheila Miyoshi Jager
Blagoveshchensk
Boxer Uprising
Category=JPSL
Category=NHF
Category=NHQ
Category=NHTQ
Category=NHW
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eq_history
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Ilchinhoe
King Kojong
Li Hongzhang
Liaoyang
Manchuria
massacre
Mukden
Open Door
Port Arthur
Protectorate Treaty
Pyongyang
Trans Siberian Railway
Yellow Sea

Product details

  • ISBN 9780674303485
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 24 Mar 2026
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Winner of the Duke of Wellington Medal for Military History, this dramatic new account of the dawn of modern East Asia places Korea at the center of a transformed world order wrought by imperial greed and devastating wars.

In the nineteenth century, Russia participated in two “great games.” One, well known, pitted the tsar’s empire against Britain in Central Asia. The other, hitherto unrecognized, saw Russia, China, and Japan vying for domination of Korea. This eye-opening account argues that the contest over Korea set the course for the future of the global order.

After centuries of isolation, Korea became a prize in the Sino-Japanese War at the close of the nineteenth century and the Russo-Japanese War at the beginning of the twentieth. Japan’s victories not only gained the Meiji regime a colony but also dislodged Imperial China from regional supremacy. As the fate of the declining tsarist empire was sealed by its surprising military defeat, the United States and Britain sized up the new Japanese challenger.

A vivid story of two geopolitical earthquakes sharing Korea as their epicenter, The Other Great Game rewrites the script of twentieth-century rivalry in the Pacific and enriches our understanding of contemporary global affairs, from the origins of Korea’s bifurcated identity—a legacy of internal politics amid the imperial squabble—to China’s irredentist ambitions and Russia’s nostalgic dreams of recovering great-power status.

Sheila Miyoshi Jager is the author of Brothers at War: The Unending Conflict in Korea and Narratives of Nation-Building in Korea: The Genealogy of Patriotism. A specialist on modern East Asian and Korean history and politics, she has written for the New York Times, Politico, and the Boston Globe. She is Professor of East Asian Studies at Oberlin College.

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