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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 May 2025
[1] “Mao: The Unknown Story: Popular History and the Scholars,” Education About Asia 11.2 (Fall 2006); “Popular History, Academic History, and Bunkum (Gavin Menzies 1421 on H-Asia),” History News Network (November 28 2005).
[2] “Samurai Baseball vs. Baseball in Japan,” Japan Focus, September 29, 2006 and “The Japanese Way of Baseball and the National Character Debate,” Special Issue: Baseball and Besuboru In Japan and The U.S. Studies on Asia Series III 3 (Fall 2006). In my original piece I also quote from Whiting's books.
[3] T. R. Reid, Confucius Lives Next Door: What Living in Japan Teaches Us About Living in the West (Random House 1999), pp. 17, 16.
[4] Anne E. Imamura, Re-Imaging Japanese Women (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1996); Anne E. Imamura, “The Japanese Family Faces Twenty-First Century Challenges,” Education About Asia, 8.2 (Fall 2003): 30–33.
[5] Andrew D. Morris, “Baseball, History, and the Local in the Global in Taiwan,” in David K. Jordan, Andrew D. Morris and Marc L. Moscowitz, ed., The Minor Arts of Daily Life: Popular Culture in Taiwan (Honolulu: University of Hawai'i, 2004): 175–203.