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Modeling the West, Returning to Asia: Shifting Politics of Representation in Japanese Colonial Expositions in Korea

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 August 2005

Hong Kal
Affiliation:
York University Asian-Pacific Research Center, Stanford University

Extract

The world exposition stemmed from the specific context of nineteenth-century Europe, but by the end of that century, its practice had already spread to the colonies as the imperial powers organized a number of colonial expositions. The colonial exposition was meant to represent colonialism as fundamental to the progress of both the metropole and the colony. The ideas of “progress” and “modernity” were represented in such a way that colonial subjects would acknowledge the benevolent contribution of imperial rule to the development of the colony. This historical practice attracted not only nations that had already achieved imperial status, but also nations such as Japan that were aspiring to become an imperial power.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2005 Society for Comparative Study of Society and History

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