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1750-1914 Present East Asia 5 Citations Paragraph Essay

¶ … 1750-1914 present east asia 5 citations paragraph 1st paragraph - change 1914-present give explanation 2nd paragraph - change 1914 - present give explanation 3rd paragraph - a continuity 1914 present give explanation conclusion paragraph generalizations bogus sites wikipedia online encyclopedias MLA citation essay 12 pieces researched evidence, 3 paragraph 6 scholarly resources wikipedia mentioned Works cited page Entries single-spaced -- inverse indentation (double space entries) Entries alphabetized authors' names. The Asian continent was less successful in keeping foreign influences away from its borders in the last three centuries, given that globalization made it increasingly difficult for nations across the continent to maintain their customs and traditions. Even with that, many Asian countries managed to adopt a series of practices from other cultures without losing their own cultural values. The industrial revolution is a step that did not take place in Asia as it did in Europe or America, given that Asians were reluctant to have their lifelong traditions taken away from them as a result of interacting with customs coming in from the West. The industrialization process happened at a slower pace in Asia, primarily because most Asian states...

Matters were quick to change however, as countries like China came across economic crisis and this led to the "introduction of new technologies and communications" (Embree and Gluck 939), given that the Chinese would have been severely affected if they were to remain impassive regarding international changes. Changes started to occur rapidly, and most Asian leaders discovered that they had to act in accordance with what happened outside of their continent. Many Asian countries started to "depended heavily on the industrialization of Europe and North America and on their rapid technological advances" (Gelber 3). Intensive agriculture was one of the main means of subsistence in Asia up until the late nineteenth century (Scalapino 1).
In spite of the fact that they did not get actively involved in international affairs previous to 1914, some of the most influential Asian countries started to express their interest in conquering territories around Asia and in putting across their dominance over the territory. Given that most Asian countries did not get involved in the industrial revolution in the nineteenth century, the continent's…

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Clyde, Paul Hibbert A History of the Modern and Contemporary Far East: A Survey of Western Contacts with Eastern Asia during the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries (New York: Prentice-Hall, 1937)

Embree, Ainslie T. And Gluck, Carol eds., Asia in Western and World History: A Guide for Teaching (Armonk, NY M.E. Sharpe, 1997)

Gelber, Harry G. Nations Out of Empires: European Nationalism and the Transformation of Asia / (New York: Palgrave, 2001)

Jensen, Richard Jon Davidann, and Yoneyuki Sugita, eds., Trans-Pacific Relations: America, Europe, and Asia in the Twentieth Century (Westport, CT: Praeger, 2003)
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