目次
Foreword by AKIRA IRIYE
Preface
Acknowledgements
Introduction “The End of Western Supremacy in Asia” by ROGER BUCKLEY
Volume I: JAPAN
1-1 Hikomatsu Kamikawa, The Bolshevization of Asia, Contemporary Japan, December 1937, 393-404
1-2 Ujiro Ohyama, The American Position: Cat'spaw or Common Sense, Contemporary Japan, December 1937, 464-474
1-3 Lt-Comdr Tota Ishimaru, I.J.N., Japan Must Fight Britain, The Paternoster Library, no. XI, 1937, 288pp.
1-4 Dr Kazutami Ukita, Humanity at the Crossroads, Dai Nippon 1938, 1938, 26-33
1-5 Shingoro Takaishi, Japan Speaks Out, 1938, ii, iii, v-ix, 1-73, 93-128, 135-147, 151-159
1-6 Yosuke Matsuoka, Building Up Manchuria, 1938, i-ii, 1-6, 1-2, 1-2, 2pp, 1-11, 28-35, 48-89, 103-116, 126-135, 173-213, 227-236
1-7 Shigemitsu, Shigemitsu speech, Proceedings of the Japan Society London, xxxvi, 1939, xviii-xxii
1-8 Viscount Kano, Viscount Kano speech, Proceedings of the Japan Society London, xxxvi, 1939, xxv-xxix
1-9 Yakichiro Suma, Where Japan Stands: Addresses Delivered in America on the Sino-Japanese Conflict, 1940, 49-76, 196-201, 214-225
1-10 Kinaoki Matsuo, trans Kilsoo K. Haan, How Japan Plans to Win, 1942, cover, iii-xxiv, 1-46, 196-201, 202-226, 234-323
Volume II: CHINA
2-1 Shuhsi Hsu, The War Conduct of the Japanese, 1938, 217pp.
2-2 Stephen C.Y. Pan, American Diplomacy Concerning Manchuria, 1938, i-iii, xix, 293-346
2-3 D.K. Lieu, The Sino-Japanese Currency War, Pacific Affairs, December 1939, 413-426
2-4 Chiang Kai-shek, Crimes and Corruption of the Japanese Militarists, 7 July 1940, 15pp.
2-5 Tan Pei-Ying, The Building of the Burma Road, 1945, prelims + map (7), 24-25, 37-60, 194-200
2-6 Chiang Kai-shek, The Northeast - Fourteen Years After, 18 September 1945
2-7 F.C. Jones, Shanghai and Tientsin: with special reference to foreign interests, 1940, cover, ii-iii, vii-xxxii, 1-9, 18-20, 36-49, 57-83, 87-93, 104-105
2-8 Eugene Staley (International Labour Office), World Economic Development: Effects on Advanced Industrial Countries, 1944, 68-75, 94-104
2-9 Gunther Stein, The Challenge of Red China, 1945, extracts
Vol. III: USA [1]
3-1 Julia E. Johnsen, Chinese-Japanese War, 1937-, 1938, 1-21, 66-74, 87-93, 99-111, 132-133, 147-161, 180-183, 188-197, 220-223, 255-257
3-2 William Henry Chamberlin, Japan Over Asia, 1938, i-xii, 13-72, 122-146, 302-318
3-3 John Gunther, Inside Asia, 1939, 1-92, 102-134, 234-249
3-4 James Farquharson Leys, The Better Earth, 1940, i-v, 43-45, 97-101, 109-114
3-5 Chitoshi Yanaga, Recent Trends in Japanese Political Thought, Pacific Affairs, June 1940, 25-127
3-6 Charles B. Fahs, Government in Japan: Recent Trends in its Scope and Operation, 1940, xi-xiii, xv, 3-61, 81-89
3-7 Lawrence K. Rosinger, Soviet Far Eastern Policy, Pacific Affairs, 13, 3, September 1940, 263-278
3-8 William Henry Chamberlin, Japan in China, 1940, 7-43, 44-74, 127-143
Vol.IV: USA [2]
4-1 Claude A. Buss, War and Diplomacy in Eastern Asia, 1941, 42-195, 499-550
4-2 William H. Taylor and Robert A. Brady, Policy Centralization in Japan Under the Kokutai Principle, Pacific Affairs, 14, 1, March 1941, 51-77
4-3 William C. Johnstone, The United States and Japan's New Order, August 1941, rev. ed., title, vii-xii, 283-335, 350-366
4-4 G. Nye Steiger, Japan's New Pro-Axis Premier, Current History, December 1941, 349-353
4-5 Kurt Bloch, ‘Guns and Butter' in Japan, Pacific Affairs, December 1941, 416-429
4-6 George E. Taylor, America's Pacific Policy: The Role and the Record, Pacific Affairs, December 1941, 430-447
4-7 Edward W. Mill, Japan Losing the Initiative, Current History, October 1942, 100-105
4-8 George E. Taylor, America in the New Pacific, 1942, 1-35, 69-97, 113-156
4-9 Ira Wolfert, Battle of the Solomons, October-November 1942, 1943, contents, 1-16, 97-118, 185-200
Vol. V: USA [3]
5-1 Kate L.Mitchell, Japan's Industrial Strength, 1942, i-ix, 140, index
5-2 Paul M.A. Linebarger, The China of Chiang K'ai-shek, 1943, 254-281
5-3 Frederick Moore, The Emperor Did Not Want War, World Affairs, 1943, 45-52
5-4 T.A. Bisson, Problems of War Production Control in Japan, Pacific Affairs, 16, 3, September 1943, 301-310
5-5 A.J. Grajdanzev, Japan's Co-Prosperity Sphere, Pacific Affairs, 16, 3, September 1943, 311-328
5-6 Harriet L. Moore, Soviet Far Eastern Policy: 1931-1945, 1945, v-xi, 80-125, 126-149, 240-277
5-7 General Victor A. Yakhontoff, Should Russia Fight Japan?, Current History, January 1945, 1-6
5-8 Robert S. Ward, Asia for the Asiatics: The Techniques of Japanese Occupation, 1945, title, v-xi, map (2), xiii-xiv, 1-37, 84-95, 160-200
5-9 T.H. Thomas, Advance in Asia, Current History, July 1945, 12-17
5-10 Major Ben Bruce Blakeney, The Japanese High Command, Military Affairs, Summer 1945, 95-113
5-11 Fritz Sternberg, Japan's Economic Imperialism, Social Research, 12, 3, September 1945, 328-349
5-12 Mark R. Shaw, What Drove Japan to War?, Peace Action, September 1945, p.3
Vol Vl: UK
6-1 Walter H. Mallory, Japan Attacks: China Resists, Foreign Affairs, October 1937, 129-142
6-2 Hector C. Bywater, Britain on the Seas, Foreign Affairs, 16, 2, January 1938, 210-221
6-3 G.M. Gathorne-Hardy, A Short History of International Affairs, 1920 to 1938, The Far East, December 1938, rev. ed., ch XIX - 301-334
6-4 Anon., China and Japan, Info Dept papers, 21, 1939, 151pp.
6-5 Winston S. Churchill, What Japan Thinks Of Us, Step by Step, 1936-1939, 1939, 193-196
6-6 Winston S. Churchill, Japan Entangled, Step by Step, 1936-1939, 1939, 233-236
6-7 Winston S. Churchill, The Japanese Burden, Step by Step, 1936-1939, 1939, 281-286
6-8 George Sansom, Liberalism in Japan, Foreign Affairs, 19, 3, April 1941, 551-560
6-9 Hugh Byas, The Japanese Enemy: His Power and His Vulnerability, 1942, 5-88
6-10 Ian Morrison, This War Against Japan: Thoughts on the Present Conflict in the Far East, 1943, 119pp. + photos
6-11 Paul Einzig, The Japanese New Order in Asia, 1943, title, v-xii, 1-22, 47-55, 66-76, 137-145
6-12 Peter de Mendelssohn, Japan's Political Warfare, 1944, title, 5-66, 77-82, 104-185
6-13 Bernard Fergusson, Beyond the Chindwin, 1945, title, 5-23, 100-114, 238-242