
Contents
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Capitalization of Colonial Inheritance Capitalization of Colonial Inheritance
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From War Memory to Colonial Inheritance From War Memory to Colonial Inheritance
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Inverted Victimhood Inverted Victimhood
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(For)given Time: The Zero Hour of Postwar Sino-Japanese Diplomatic Relations (For)given Time: The Zero Hour of Postwar Sino-Japanese Diplomatic Relations
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The Political Deployment of War Memory in the 1980s The Political Deployment of War Memory in the 1980s
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The Economic Deployment of Colonial Inheritance since the 1990s The Economic Deployment of Colonial Inheritance since the 1990s
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Generational Transmision of Loss Generational Transmision of Loss
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The Afterlife of Colonial Modernity in Contemporary China The Afterlife of Colonial Modernity in Contemporary China
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Inheritance of Loss Inheritance of Loss
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The Political Economy of Redemption The Political Economy of Redemption
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Awase Kagami: The Refractive Structure of Transmission Awase Kagami: The Refractive Structure of Transmission
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Accountability after Empire Accountability after Empire
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The Topography of after Empire The Topography of after Empire
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One Introduction: Colonial Inheritance and the Topography of After Empire
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Published:December 2016
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Abstract
This introductory chapter, “Colonial Inheritance and the Topography of After Empire,” introduces the concept of colonial inheritance to make visible generational responses to the losses incurred through the Japanese imperialism in China, as set in motion through China’s transition to a market-oriented society. While public discussions on the question of coming to terms with contested pasts primarily revolve around the politics of memory, this chapter presents the recent capitalization of colonial inheritance in Northeast China as pivotal and underexplored sites for the generational transmission of unaccounted-for pasts in the economic realm. Similarly, while much attention has been paid to the question of apology and historical responsibility for Japan’s wartime violence, this chapter points to the importance of framing this “history problem” in East Asia through the framework of after empire, which situates the question within intertwined processes of postimperial, postcolonial, and postwar dynamics. Seen through the lens of colonial inheritance, what is usually described as China’s “transition” to a market economy (or else subsumed under rubrics of globalization or neoliberalism) is revealed as an integral part of a larger economy of inheriting––inheriting socialist modernity, inheriting colonial modernity, and the dynamics between the two in navigating what is to come.
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