Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://ah.lib.nccu.edu.tw/handle/140.119/55167
DC FieldValueLanguage
dc.contributor.advisor周惠民zh_TW
dc.contributor.advisorChou, Huei Minen_US
dc.contributor.author小幡惠理zh_TW
dc.creator小幡惠理zh_TW
dc.date2012en_US
dc.date.accessioned2012-11-01T06:02:49Z-
dc.date.available2012-11-01T06:02:49Z-
dc.date.issued2012-11-01T06:02:49Z-
dc.identifierG0097924009en_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://nccur.lib.nccu.edu.tw/handle/140.119/55167-
dc.description碩士zh_TW
dc.description國立政治大學zh_TW
dc.description亞太研究英語碩士學位學程(IMAS)zh_TW
dc.description97924009zh_TW
dc.description101zh_TW
dc.description.abstractThe Japan-British Exhibition was held at the White City, Shepherd’s Bush, London from May 14 to October 29, 1910. This exhibition was held 15 years after Japan’s acquisition of Taiwan as her first colony, and it was a great opportunity for Japan to show her successful management of Taiwan to the world. In this event, while Japanese industries and cultures were widely introduced, the ‘Formosan Hamlet’ was reconstructed and some Taiwanese aborigines showed their life, performed their war dance, and mimicked battles in front of visitors there.en_US
dc.description.tableofcontents1. Introduction..................................................................................................p. 1\n1.1. Academic Background: An Encounter with Colonial/Postcolonial Issues and Recognition of Colonial Impact on the Modern Society................................p. 1\n1.2. Motivation I: Why Exhibition?.......................................................................p. 3\n1.3. Motivation II: Why the Japan-British Exhibition of 1910?............................p. 4\n1.4. Purpose of Research........................................................................................p. 6\n1.5. Hypothesis, Methodology, and Thesis Structure.............................................p. 7\n\n2. Development of Exhibition...........................................................................p. 8\n2.1. Development of Exhibition in the West..........................................................p. 8\n2.2. The Meiji Government’s Understandings of the Origin of Exhibition...........p. 11\n2.3. Development of the Exhibition in Japan and \nJapan’s Encounter with the Western-style International Exhibition...............p. 13\n2.4. Native Peoples in Western International Exhibition.......................................p. 17\n2.4.1. Features of Major International Expositions held from 1851 to 1915............p. 17\n2.4.2. Unofficial Entertainment: ‘Exotic People’......................................................p. 18\n2.4.3. Official ‘Living Exhibits’: Civilization vs. Primitiveness...............................p. 19\n2.4.4. Lucrative Entertainment and Political Propaganda.........................................p. 20\n2.4.5. Anthropological Aspect...................................................................................p. 21\n\n3. The Fifth National Industrial Exposition....................................................p. 22\n3.1. The Importance of the Fifth National Industrial Exposition...........................p. 22\n3.2. National Industrial Exposition.........................................................................p. 23\n3.3. The Fifth National Industrial Exposition as an International Exhibition........p. 24\n3.4. Time background of the Fifth National Industrial Exposition........................p. 26\n3.5. Economic and Colonial Intentions of \nthe Fifth National Industrial Exposition.........................................................p. 29\n3.6. Proposal of the Taiwan Pavilion \nin the Fifth National Industrial Exposition.....................................................p. 31\n\n4. The Japan-British Exhibition of 1910.........................................................p. 34\n4.1. Background of the Japan-British Exhibition: Proposed ‘Grand Exposition\nin Tokyo’ after Japan’s Victory in the Russo-Japanese War (1904-1905).......p. 34\n4.2. The Japanese Initiator of the Japan British Exhibition, Komura Jutaro \nand the British Initiator, Imre Kiralfy.............................................................p. 39\n4.3. Objectives of the Japan-British Exhibition.....................................................p. 43\n4.4. Objects Exhibited in the Japan-British Exhibition:\nPosition of the Taiwanese Aborigines in the Exhibition.................................p. 44\n4.5. The Formosan Hamlet as One of Eight Unofficial Sideshows.......................p. 46\n4.6. The Taiwan Aboriginal Participants Arrived ..................................................p. 49\n4.7. Representations of Formosa in the Exhibition................................................p. 50\n4.7.1. Formosa in the Oriental Palace and the Formosan Hamlet.............................p. 51\n4.7.2. Representations of Formosa in the Japanese Press..........................................p. 52\n4.8. Why Paiwan?...................................................................................................p. 54\n4.8.1. Respectable People as Appropriate Participants..............................................p. 54\n4.8.2. Tourism for Taiwanese Aborigines as One of Riban-Seisaku.........................p. 57\n4.9. Aftermath of the Exhibition............................................................................p. 60\n4.9.1. The Paiwan Participants’ Reactions................................................................p. 60\n4.9.2. The Ainu Participants’ Reactions....................................................................p. 64\n4.9.3. Japanese Journalist’s Reaction........................................................................p. 65\n\n5. Conclusion......................................................................................................p. 67\n\nBibliographyzh_TW
dc.language.isoen_US-
dc.source.urihttp://thesis.lib.nccu.edu.tw/record/#G0097924009en_US
dc.subjectthe Japan-British Exhibitionen_US
dc.subject1910, the Formosan Hamleten_US
dc.titleThe Display of Taiwan’s Aborigines in the Japan-British Exhibition of 1910 as a Showcase of Japan’s Colonial Poweren_US
dc.typethesisen
dc.relation.reference<Books and Magazines>\n\nAsahi Shimbun Journalists. Obei Yuran-ki: Dainikai Sekai Isshu. 1910. Osaka: Asahi Shimbun.\n\nvan Bremen, Jan. Shimizu, Akitoshi. Anthropology and Colonialism in Asia and Oceania. 1999. United States: Curzon Press.\n\nÇelik, Zeynep. Displaying the Orient: Architecture of Islam at Nineteenth-Century World’s Fairs. 1992. United States: California University Press.\n\nHotta-Lister, Ayako. The Japan-British Exhibition of 1910: Gateway to the Island Empire of the East. 1999. Tokyo: Japan Library.\n\nIto, Mamiko. Meiji Nihon to Bankoku Hakurankai (Meiji Japan and World’s Fair). 2008. Tokyo: Yoshikawa Hiroshi Bunkan.\n\nJukes, Geoffrey. The Russo-Japanese War 1904-1905. 2002. Oxford: Osprey Publishing.\n\nKikuchi, Yuko. Refracted Modernity: Visual Culture and Identity in Colonial Taiwan. 2007. Honolulu: University Hawaii Press.\n\nMacKenzie, John. Propaganda and Empire: Manipulation of British Public Opinion, 1880-1960. 1988. England: Manchester University Press. \n\nMatsuda, Kyoko. Teikoku no Shisen (Eye sight of Empire): Hakurankai to Ibunkahyosho (Exhibition and Representations of Different Cultures). 2003. Tokyo: Yoshikawa ko bunkan.\n\nMiyatake, Kimio. The Yellow Masked Oedipus : Ainu and the Japan-British Exhibition of 1910. 2005. Hokkaido: Hokkaido University.\n\nMutsu, Hirokichi. The British Press and the Japan-British Exhibition of 1910. The University of Melbourne: Melbourne, 2001.\n\nParezo, J., Nancy. Fowler, D., Don. Anthropology Goes to the Fair. The 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition. 2007. Lincoln and London: University of Nebraska Press.\n\nSaid, Edward. Orientalism. 2003. London: Penguin Books.\n\nSuzuki, Sakutaro. Taiwan no Banzoku Kenkyu (A Research on Taiwanese Aborigines). 1977. Tokyo: Seishi sha.\n\nTaiwan Association. January, 1902. Taiwan Kyokai Kaiho (News Letter of the Taiwan Association), No. 41\n\nYamaguch, Mamoru. Kouza Taiwan Bungaku (A Lecture on Taiwanese Literature). 2003. Tokyo: Kokusho Kankokai.\n\nYamaji, Katsuhiko. Nichiei Hakurankai to Ningen Dobutsuen (The Japan-British Exhibition and Human Zoo). 2009. Osaka: Kansaigakuin Shuppankai.\n\nYamaji, Katsuhiko. Shokuminchishugi to Jinruigaku (Colonialism and Anthropology). 2002. Osaka: Kansaigakuin Shuppankai.\n\nYoshimi, Shunya. Hakurankai no Seijigaku (Political Science of World’s Fair). 1999. Tokyo: Chuo Koron Shinsha.\n\n<Government Documents>\n\nNichiei Hakurankai Jimukyoku (日英博覧会事務局The Japan-British Exhibition Bureau). Nichiei Hakurankai no Tokkyonin Shuppinnin Sonotani Kansuru Ippan Kisoku Doushuppin Burui Mokuroku (日英博覧会ノ特許人出品人其他ニ関スル一般規則・同出品部類目録). Tokyo Kokubunsha: Tokyo, 1909.\n\nNoshomu Sho (The Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce農商務省). Daigokai Naikoku Kangyo Hakurankai Hokokusho (第五回内国勧業博覧会務報告書). Osaka Shokoka: Osaka, 1904.\n\nNoshomu Sho (The Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce農商務省). Daigokai Naikoku Kangyo Hakurankai Yoran (第五回内国勧業博覧会要覧). Daigokai Naikoku Kangyo Hakurankai Yoran Hensanjo: Osaka, 1903.\n\nNoshomu Sho (The Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce農商務省). Nichiei Hakurankai Jimukyoku Jimu Hokoku (日英博覧会事務局事務報告) Vol.1. Totsuban Insatsu: Tokyo, 1912.\n\nNoshomu Sho (The Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce農商務省). Nichiei Hakurankai Jimukyoku Jimu Hokoku (日英博覧会事務局事務報告) Vol.2. Totsuban Insatsu: Tokyo, 1912.\n\nTaiwan Sotokufu Keimukyoku. Taiwan Riban Shiko (台湾理蕃誌稿) Vol.3. Taihoku: Taiwan Sotokufu Keisatsu Honsho(台湾総督府警察本署), 1921.\n\n\n\n<Online Resources>\n\nNational Diet Library. Colum: Exhibitions before 1850. \n[Online] http://www.ndl.go.jp/exposition/s1/column-1.html [Accessed March 17, 2012]zh_TW
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