The Politics of Nanjing: An Impartial InvestigationUniversity Press of America, 2007 - 173 ページ The events of December, 1937 in Nanjing are long-standing causes of contention rooted in political differences of opinion between China and Japan. The Chinese view is unified, expressed in the '300,000 victims' engraved on the memorial walls in Nanjing, which bluntly refers to the Chinese opinion and entity of the 'Great Massacre School.' Views in Japan range from complete denial to agreement with the Chinese. The Japanese government's position of denial fuels the diplomatic clash. The Politics of Nanjing takes a centrist position in order to reconstruct historiographically the days leading up to and following the Japanese invasion of the capital and the political aftermath in China-Japan relations. |
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XII | 17 |
XVI | 18 |
XVII | 20 |
XVIII | 24 |
XIX | 25 |
XXI | 29 |
XXII | 32 |
XXIII | 37 |
XLI | 101 |
XLII | 102 |
XLIII | 103 |
XLIV | 104 |
XLV | 105 |
XLVI | 107 |
XLVII | 110 |
XLVIII | 111 |
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above-cited arguments Army's Azuma battle of Nanjing bodies buried carried China Daily China Information Committee Chinese Chinese soldiers Chung Shan Tang claim concerning conducted court Crimes Trial December Documents English English-language evidence executed fact foreign Guo Qi Hankou Hora Tomio Hsin Shen Pao Illusion School IMTFE included January Japa Japan Japanese Army Japanese occupation Japanese soldiers Japanese translation Japanese troops Jiang Jieshi judgment killed large numbers Left Book Club looting Manchester Guardian Massacre School materials Means ment Ministry Nanjing and Tokyo Nanjing Incident Nanjing Massacre Nanking Safety Zone nese newspaper North China Daily number of bodies occupation of Nanjing officers organization political prisoners propaganda published rape Red Swastika Society reports Reuters Shanghai shed their uniforms Shimbun Sino-Japanese Sino-Japanese War Slaughter Smythe Survey Smythe's Subhead Taiwan testimony Timperley Timperley's book tion titled United victims war crimes Wei Yuan Westerners writes Yangzi Yoshida Zeng Xubai