Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Chinese and Japanese Perceptions of the Jews
2. The Chinese Nationalist Government and the Shanghai Jewish
Refugees
3. Yasue Norihiro, Inuzuka Koreshige, and Japan's Policy toward the
Shanghai Jewish Refugees, December 1937- December 1939
4. The Tripartite Pact and Japan's Policy toward the Shanghai
Jewish Refugee Issue, January 1940-August 1945
Epilogue: The European Jewish Refugees and Shanghai
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Gao Bei is Assistant Professor of History and International Studies at the University of North Carolina Wilmington.
"Basing her work on documents from American, Chinese, Japanese, and
Taiwanese archives, Gao follows a clearly innovative approach that
offers a dual reading of the policies and practices of the
Nationalist Chinese government, on the one hand, and the Japanese
government and military forces in occupied Manchuria and China, on
the other...Gao's book...provid[es] us with a rich archival
documentation that, still today, remains relatively
unexplored, makes an undeniable contribution to a larger, more
up-to-date awareness of
the topic."--Journal of Modern History
"[T]he political context provided by Gao Bei makes her monograph a
welcome contribution... The monograph is...well written and
engaging. [T]his is a thorough treatment of Chinese and Japanese
approaches to Jewish refugees and it deserves a wide
audience."--Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African
Studies
"Many books and articles have been written about [the Jews from
central and eastern Europe who found refuge in Shanghai during
World War II] but, as the book under review demonstrate, there are
always new documents to be tapped. Gao Bei has managed to discover
hitherto little-known sources...This well-researched book
contributes to our knowledge of the subject."--Journal of Japanese
Studies
"Gao investigates and compares the processes of Chinese and
Japanese policy toward Jews against the backdrop of rising
nationalism, the Second Sino-Japanese War, and World War II...This
deep but concise study draws from compelling archival sources in
China, Taiwan, and Japan that truly sets in apart from previous
scholarship about the Jews of Shanghai...The integration of Chinese
and Japanese primary and seconday sources also allows Gao to
advance new
information about the Chinese and Japanese interactions with
Shaghai Jews."--Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies
"The movement of Jewish refugees from Hitler's Europe to Shanghai
is well known. Using new sources, Gao Bei explains the less
understood riddle of Chinese and Japanese thinking on the Jewish
question and on Jewish settlement in East Asia, all within the
context of the fighting from 1931 to 1945. An important and welcome
book."--Norman J.W. Goda, Braman Professor of Holocaust Studies,
University of Florida
"Gao Bei uses rich new sources to tell the story of the Chinese and
Japanese treatment of Jewish refugees during World War II. The book
sheds much-needed light on the history not only of modern Jewish
experience, but of nation-building in East Asia."--Rana Mitter,
author of A Bitter Revolution: China's Struggle with the Modern
World
"Gao Bei paints a fascinatingly intricate picture...[She] has a
keen eye for detail and also provides the reader with an elaborate
overview...Richly-illuminating."--Journal of the Royal Asiatic
Society
"By moving away from the more familiar Eurocentric narrative, Gao
offers a refreshing look at the difficulties, prejudices and
motivations in government responses to Jewish refugees and the
Holocaust."--European History Quarterly
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