A common misconception holds that Marco Polo "opened up" a
closed and recalcitrant "Orient" to the West. However, this
sweeping history covering 4,000 years of international relations
from the perspective of China, Japan, Korea, and Southeast Asia
shows that the region's extensive involvement in world affairs
began thousands of years ago.
In a time when the writing of history is increasingly
specialized, Warren I. Cohen has made a bold move against the
grain. In broad but revealing brushstrokes, he paints a huge canvas
of East Asia's place in world affairs throughout four millennia.
Just as Cohen thinks broadly across time, so too, he defines the
boundaries of East Asia liberally, looking beyond China, Japan, and
Korea to include Southeast Asia. In addition, Cohen stretches the
scope of international relations beyond its usual limitations to
consider the vital role of cultural and economic exchanges.
Within this vast framework, Cohen explores the system of Chinese
domination in the ancient world, the exchanges between East Asia
and the Islamic world from the thirteenth to the seventeenth
centuries, and the emergence of a European-defined international
system in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The book covers
the new imperialism of the 1890s, the Manchurian crisis of the
early 1930s, the ascendancy of Japan, the trials of World War II,
the drama of the Cold War, and the fleeting "Asian Century" from
the mid-1970s to the mid-1990s.
"East Asia at the Center" is replete with often-overlooked or
little-known facts, such as:
- A record of persistent Chinese imperialism in the region
- Tibet's status as a major power from the 7th to the 9th
centuries C.E., when it frequently invaded China and decimated
Chinese armies
- Japan's profound dependence on Korea for its early cultural
development
- The enormous influence of Indian cuisine on that of China
- Egyptian and Ottoman military aid to their Muslim brethren in
India and Sumatra against European powers
- Extensive Chinese sea voyages to Arabia and East Africa --
long before such famous Westerners as Vasco da Gama and Christopher
Columbus took to the seas
"East Asia at the Center"'s expansive historical view puts the
trials and advances of the past four millennia into perspective,
showing that East Asia has often been preeminent on the world stage
-- and conjecturing that it might be so again in the not-so-distant
future.
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