“远东对美国意味着什么”:两次世界大战期间的区域研究政治

Constance J. S. Chen
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摘要

在两次世界大战之间的年代里,美国人在新的地缘政治条件和全球权力轴心的变化中重新定义了亚洲性的含义,从而重新定位了亚洲在美国大战略中所扮演的角色,以重新调整民族国家在国际社会中的地位。在整个20世纪20年代和30年代,太平洋关系研究所和美国学术团体理事会等国际非政府组织组成的财团与大学合作生产知识。历史学家和国际关系专家认为,二战结束时在高等院校设立区域研究是遏制共产主义扩散的主要对策之一。与许多学者所做的将20世纪50年代和60年代作为学科形成时期的关注不同,本文阐明了早期对亚洲的新生智力迷恋与对他者的重新定义之间的相互联系。最终,对日本在太平洋地区日益增长的侵略行为的担忧助长了美国霸权的发展,因为学术体系成为帝国主义内部经济、知识和政治进程和机制融合的一部分,这些过程和机制共同努力,设计了美国在亚洲内部和对亚洲的影响力。
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‘What the Far East Means to America’: The Politics of Area Studies during the Interwar Years
During the interwar years, Americans redefined the meaning of Asianness amid new geopolitical conditions and shifts in global axes of power, thereby relocating the role that Asia played in the U.S. grand strategy to recalibrate the nation-state’s position within the international community. Throughout the 1920s and 1930s, a consortium of international non-governmental organizations such as the Institute of Pacific Relations and the American Council of Learned Societies collaborated with universities in the production of knowledge. Historians and international relations specialists have touted the creation of area studies at institutions of higher learning at the end of World War ii as one of the principal responses for stemming the proliferation of communism. Instead of focusing on the 1950s and 1960s as the formative era of the academic discipline as many scholars have done, this article illuminates the earlier interconnections between the nascent intellectual fascination with Asia and the reinscription of otherness. Ultimately, anxiety over growing Japanese aggression in the Pacific aided the development of U.S. hegemony as the academic system became part of an inter-imperialist amalgamation of a multitude of economic, intellectual, and political processes and mechanisms that worked together to engineer American influence within and over Asia.
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