@article{oai:kumadai.repo.nii.ac.jp:00022472, author = {Liao, Yu-Ching and 廖, 育卿}, journal = {熊本大学社会文化研究}, month = {Mar}, note = {application/pdf, 論文(Article), Mori Ogai's Tetsugaku Kogai and Kokaron Kogai discuss two serious concepts during the Meiji 30s (1897-1919): the Racial Philosophy Concept and the Yellow Peril Concept. These two concepts spread rapidly throughout the western world during the late 19th century and reached the East during the Sino-Japanese War (1894-1895) where they greatly influenced the outbreak of the Russo-Japanese War in 1904. Various views of Mori' s concepts, especially that of the Yellow Peril, developed within Japanese society heavily influenced by the Meiji government, while Mori maintained his own independent and contrary stance. Mori gave two speeches introducing the Yellow Peril concept but always showed an uncommitted and passive attitude when discussing the unfair censures of the western world. He gave no counterattacks to accusations made against China and Japan in the West and was therefore regarded as having an abnormal reaction to the criticism placed before him. The purpose of this paper is to discuss the different statements about the Yellow Peril developed during the Meiji 30s in Japanese society and to explore why Mori neither reacted to those critics nor showed strong criticism of Yellow Peril in his speeches.}, pages = {233--248}, title = {明治期の<黄禍論>言説に見た森鴎外 : 講演「人種哲学梗概」と「黄禍論梗概」を中心に}, volume = {7}, year = {2009} }