Talk:Fukuzawa Yukichi

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Fukuzawa is *not* in the group photo. That is a different delegation, which went to Washington D.C. on a different ship (not the Kanrin Maru).

How true is that bit about the Korean students getting drunk and stealing from the school. It sounds like Japanese folklore to me...

[edit] From Kim Okgyun Discussion

Fukuzawa was later criticized as a supporter of Japanese imperialism because of his essay "Datsu-A Ron" ("Leaving Asia") published in 1885, as well as for his support of the First Sino-Japanese War (1894-1895). Yet, "Datsu-A Ron" was actually a response to a failed attempt by Koreans to organize an effective reform faction, an attempt he had supported. He had invited young Korean aristocrats to his school. Yet, they squandered their time and money on getting drunk and buying prostitutes and after Fukuzawa tightened their allowance, they attempted a failed robbery of a school safe. The essay was published as a withdrawal of his support. Nevertheless the assistance provided to radical Koreans during this era was never intended to lead to complete independence for the peninsula, but on the contrary sought to bring Korea under ever greater Japanese influence. This was amply demonstrated by the power-plays undertaken in Korea by both Koreans supported by Fukuzawa and the Imperial Japanese Army during the First Sino-Japanese War.

Somebody who's knowledgeable about this person please fix the paragraph for following reasons.

  • Texts in the biography of Kim Okgyun indicate that not all Koreans got drunk & did xxx. The sentence above constructs all Koreans as lazy people. And the sentence is written in wrong grammar.
  • The "failed attempt" should be something else because the attempt was still going on & the most probable reason for its small net progress was financial.
  • Before the "Nevertheless" sentence, there should be a description on the Gaehwa-pa movement first. The "intention" is somewhat out of the blue.
  • Maybe the claim should be broader and more specific examples should be provided at the end of the paragraph b/c the "power play" occurred even before the Japanese annexation. (Wikimachine 04:11, 6 December 2006 (UTC))