Rival Civilisations

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A01=Chika Tonooka
Anglo
Argument
Asiatic
Author_Chika Tonooka
Binary
Broader
Burden
Bushido
Capitalism
Capitalist
Category=JPA
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Chinese
Civilisation
Civilisational
Colonial
Conception
Convergence
Crisis
Dickinson
Discourse
Edwardian
Emphasis
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eq_history
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Eurocentric
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Fascism
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forthcoming
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Government
Harootunian
Humanity
Imperial
Imperialist
Implications
Industrial
Influence
Intellectuals
Internationalism
Internationalist
Japanese
Japanese war
League
Liberal
Manchuria
Meiji
Miki
Military
Mission
Modernity
Murray
Nationalism
Plurality
Policy
Politics
Postcolonial
Racial
Recognition
Russo
Significant
Spiritual
Success
Thinkers
Toynbee
Trajectory
Transformation
Unique
Universal
Universalism
Universalist
Victory
Watsuji
Westernisation
Yanagita

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691271804
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 06 Oct 2026
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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How British intellectuals of the twentieth century reckoned with the emergence of an Asian power

Most historians of nineteenth and twentieth century Europe point to the persistence of racialised and hierarchical views of non-Europeans as “uncivilised.” Yet these accounts overlook the profound intellectual impact of what contemporaries called the “awakening of Asia.” In Rival Civilisations, Chika Tonooka shows how the rise of Japan after 1905 compelled British intellectuals to rethink fundamental questions about world order and human difference. Juxtaposing Japanese and British sources, Tonooka offers an innovative history of British Eurocentrism—its ebbs and flows and emergent pluralist alternatives—through the lens of British debates on Japan.

Tonooka describes how British intellectuals and commentators grappled with such issues as whether civilisation was singular or plural; whether the civilising mission in Asia might be more successfully undertaken as the “yellow man’s burden”; whether non-Christians could be moral; and whether a world converging along Western lines was likely and even desirable. Even at the Empire’s peak, British thinkers began to grasp that Britain could no longer take its civilisational preeminence for granted. But Tonooka also considers what these debates on Japan missed, arguing that British civilisational discourse consistently overlooked what she demonstrates to be the paradoxical nature of global modernity. As a result, these British blind spots repeatedly foreclosed anticipations of critical world political challenges that lay ahead. Her original and rigorous analysis will enable readers to identify analogous blind spots over the rise of China and its consequences for the global order.

Chika Tonooka is director of studies in history and politics at Pembroke College, Cambridge, and an affiliated lecturer in the Faculty of History at the University of Cambridge.

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