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In April 1895, Japan was victorious in battle and humiliated in diplomacy. The Triple Intervention orchestrated by France, Germany and Russia compelled the nascent Meiji empire to relinquish its most recent additions, the Kwantung Leasehold and Railway Zone, both located in Northeast China. Journalist Tokutomi Sohô was famously “vexed beyond tears” at news of the reversal of Japan’s fortunes, and his grief echoed the consternation of the nation. To memorialize his sense of loss, Sohô kept a handful of gravel from the leasehold in a souvenir box on his desk in Tokyo. Ten years later, following Japan’s defeat of Russia, the land was Japan’s again, though the vulnerability of this “significant soil” to outside threats would be enduring. O'Dwyer will examine an episode of settler activism during the World War I period that captures settlers' complicated relationship with the politics of place in the empire and which foreshadowed later struggles to keep the Kwantung leasehold a center of popular participation in imperial governance.
Thursday, May 24 at Noon
Location: LJ 119, Thomas Jefferson Building, 10 First St. S.E., Washington DC
For more information, contact the Kluge Center at (202) 707-3302. Request ASL and ADA accommodations five days in advance at 202-707-6362 or ADA@loc.gov
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