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- Title
Port towns and diplomacy: Japanese naval visits to Britain and Australia in the early twentieth century.
- Authors
Bassett, Melanie
- Abstract
The Anglo-Japanese Alliance of 1905 was a watershed moment for the presence of the Royal Navy in the Pacific. Although it allowed the Royal Navy to concentrate its fleets in European waters, this strategy caused resentment due to the underlying fear of the 'Yellow Peril', especially in the British dominions of Australia and New Zealand. The Anglo-Japanese Alliance presented some challenges to the received Edwardian racial hierarchy and the idea of British military supremacy. This article demonstrates how the 'port town' not only became a place of mediation where high-level international diplomacy mingled with the face-to-face experience of an alliance 'in practice', but also a space through which issues such as Otherness and imperial security were contested and explored.
- Subjects
PORT cities; ANGLO-Japanese Alliance of 1902; GREAT Britain. Royal Navy; GREAT Britain. MI5; MEDIATION
- Publication
International Journal of Maritime History, 2020, Vol 32, Issue 1, p45
- ISSN
0843-8714
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1177/0843871420903160