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  • Publisher:
    Cambridge University Press
    Publication date:
    08 November 2025
    20 November 2025
    ISBN:
    9781009640817
    9781009640800
    Creative Commons:
    Creative Common License - CC Creative Common License - BY Creative Common License - NC
    This content is Open Access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC-BY-NC 4.0.
    https://creativecommons.org/creativelicenses
    Dimensions:
    (228 x 152 mm)
    Weight & Pages:
    0.576kg, 286 Pages
    Dimensions:
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Book description

In this study of Japan's imperial historiography in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, Birgit Tremml-Werner examines the use of history to promote expansion in the Asia-Pacific region. Focussing on historian-diplomat Murakami Naojirō, she highlights the impact of the archive and translation in knowledge creation. Combining empirical examples including early modern diplomatic missions to Europe, indigenous Taiwanese history, colonial education and post-war cultural diplomacy, this work emphasizes how the past is represented in the intertwined environments of history and memory. She argues that the Japanese case also reveals wider questions around the myth-making of nation states, and the extent to which 'historiographical violence' has silenced the voices of actors, including Indigenous peoples and women, within the archival record. This title is also available as open access on Cambridge Core.

Reviews

‘Layering analyses of early modern history, modern historiography, and contemporary commemoration, this subtle and learned study of a Japanese historian-diplomat reveals how the writing of diplomatic history has not merely recorded and recounted but collaborated with practices of translation and with diplomacy itself in constructing the discursive space of foreign relations.’

Jordan Sand - Georgetown University

‘Negotiating Imperialism is a tour-de-force look at New Imperialist use of History as violent technology of empire building. Polyglot Tremml-Werner skilfully disentangles and dissects strands of choices leading to archival creations that sidelined Indigenous, colonial, and female voices, and encourages us to strive for an inclusive and equitable global History.’

Lisa Yoshikawa - Hobart and William Smith Colleges

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Contents

  • Negotiating Imperialism
    pp i-ii
  • Negotiating Imperialism - Title page
    pp iii-iii
  • Murakami Naojirō’s Archival Diplomacy
  • Copyright page
    pp iv-iv
  • Contents
    pp v-vi
  • Illustrations
    pp vii-vii
  • Acknowledgments
    pp viii-xi
  • Abbreviations
    pp xii-xii
  • Prologue
    pp 1-4
  • 1 - Introduction
    pp 5-38
  • 2 - Translator Historian and Scholar Diplomat
    pp 39-70
  • Murakami’s Life of Global Knowledge
  • 3 - Formal Diplomatic Relations and the Untranslatability of Gaikō
    pp 71-110
  • 4 - Entangled Biographies and the Imperialist Creation of Historical Knowledge
    pp 111-150
  • 5 - Nan’yōshi
    pp 151-191
  • How to Position Japan in Southeast Asian History
  • 6 - From Takasago’s Past to Taiwan’s History
    pp 192-225
  • Murakami between Silencing and Exaggerating
  • Epilogue
    pp 226-231
  • References
    pp 232-267
  • Index
    pp 268-272

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