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    Online Resource
    Peking : [Verlag nicht ermittelbar] ; Vol. 1, No. 1 (Dec. 1, 1919)-vol.7, no 2341 (Oct., 8 1927)
    UID:
    gbv_1024167909
    Edition: Leiden Brill 2016-2016 Online-Ressource Online-Ausgabe: Leiden : Brill, 2016. Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: Brill online primary sources
    Content: In Japan’s network of newspapers presenting the national case for expansion and leadership in Asia, the North China Standard (in Chinese, Huabei zheng bao) stands alongside the Japan Times & Mail as a real newspaper, distributing real news written by real journalists. Derided as a propaganda rag when it first began publication in December 1919, the Standard read better, and investigated and reported better quality news to a steadily growing readership in post-WW1 China and Japan. It was also a representative newspaper chosen for international conferences and delivered gratis to all delegates.The North China Standard was founded in December 1919 by John Russell Kennedy (1861-1928), Anglo-Irish master architect of Japan’s modern propaganda programmes. Its most immediate functions, in the wake of propaganda failures at the Paris Conference and the Treaty of Versailles granting Japan continuing rights in Shandong Province, was to argue Japan’s claim to special rights and advisory powers in Chinese affairs, to question the ability of the Chinese to govern China, and to maintain British support for the Anglo-Japanese Alliance. Throughout the 1920s it served as one of Japan’s representative newspapers at international conferences, delivered gratis to all delegates.Sticking to Japan’s propaganda mission would have made for a dull read, and the Standard made a slow start under Satoh Kenri, (known as Henry), in 1919. However, the paper improved under the British journalist, John S. Willes in the 1920s. It took the gifted and imaginative Liverpudlian(1888-1956) George Gorman to turn the North China Standard around and make it into a real newspaper. Both Satoh and Gorman were seasoned publicists in the cause of Japan. However, Gorman’s long experience in this role convinced him that the best way to advance Japan’s cause was through polemic and debate. Under Gorman, the North China Standard served Chinese and foreign readerships intelligently and conscientiously, making this title a valuable primary source forscholars of Japan and China.
    Note: Gesehen am 4.6.2018 , Erscheint täglich, teils auch unregelmäßig , Coverage 1919-1926 , Reproduktion , Online-Ausgabe: Leiden : Brill, 2016. Online-Ressource
    Additional Edition: Elektronische Reproduktion von The North China standard Peking : The North China Standard, 1919-1927
    Language: English
    Keywords: China ; Japan ; Ostasien ; Geschichte 1919-1927 ; searchable full text ; Datenbank ; Zeitung ; Regionalzeitung
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