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Monday, October 17, 2016

Japanese Occupation and the Pre-War Nationalists

The Japanese transaction during realness War Two was so to a wide bound a spell story for the development of ultranationalistic movements essentially because it had empowered them to do what they could not in the pre-war period collectible to their deliver limitations and the constraints imposed by their colonial rulers and this was the catalyst for ancestor the process of gaining independence. During the Japanese Occupation, a rise to prominence of most radical nationalist leadership and the establishment of a force force that will animate the journey off the nationalists to independence, vis-à-vis the distinguish they had been in the pre-war period due(p) to colonial suppression. However, there was also a sense of continuity underwriten amongst the pre-war stance and the situation during the Japanese Occupation as there was an unequal federation between the Japanese and the nationalists and continuing divisions among the nationalists showing no diversity from the pre-war period. However, these points of continuity were later be superficial by the nationalists as they had bypassed the Japanese to spread their own in the controlled mass government activity which shows a balancing off of the supposed unequal partnership. Additionally, notwithstanding the nationalists being divided by religion and secularism into deuce unalike united fronts, this was still a turning point in that the pre-war period did not see the uniformity of these roots in two separate entities and this divided unity would allow them to tap on a wider, larger group for mass support of nationalism. Thus, the deduction of the changes made to the nationalists during the occupation in comparison to the pre-war period ar amplified, reinforcing my argument that the Japanese Occupation was indeed to a large extent a turning point for the development of nationalist movements in Southeast Asia.\nWhen transfer in parallel to the pre-war period, a stark difference is seen between the pre-war period and the peri...

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