Review: Japan: An Environmental History, by Conrad D. Totman

Totman argues that by interrogating the past it is possible to find such answers, where precedent of human interaction starting with the forger period illuminates just how critical and exponential the environmental impact of humans have been in the last 100 years or so utilizing Japan as a case study

Review: Revolution Goes East: Imperial Japan and Soviet Communism, by Tatiana Linkhoeva

“Revolution goes East explores multiple threads across Linkhoeva’s six chapters providing snapshots of the intellectual and political debates that embroiled the Taisho democratic period without being tied to a specific narrative and showcases the chaotic fumbling and actualization contemporary politicians and theoreticians found themselves in.”

Review:China’s Trial by Fire: The Shanghai War of 1932, by Donald A. Jordan

Jordan sets out on an ambitious task to rewrite the narrative surrounding the “Shanghai Incident” which he astutely claims has been largely trivialized in the “accepted” waypoints of deteriorating Sino-Japanese relations. Building on his previous research that explored Chinese Anti-Japanese antagonisms and economic competition, Jordan aims to show that rather than a simple incident, the clash in 1932 constituted an outright war in all but name.