| | Intersections: A Forgotten 'Hero': Kawahara Misako and Japan's Informal Imperialism in Mongolia during the Meiji Period |
 | | Throughout this period, however, it is also true that much time and energy was expended by a range of Japanese organizations—the military, religious groups, the right wing, and business—to strengthen Japan's position in Mongolia. |
 | | Yet, her career illuminates the interplay of different Japanese interests operating in Mongolia in the late Meiji period and beyond, as well as illustrating some important underlying attitudes which helped to determine the nature of ongoing Japanese activities in the region. |
 | | It was while she was there that she met the noted Meiji educator Shimoda Utako (1854-1936),[16] whose influence on her was considerable. |
| wwwsshe.murdoch.edu.au /intersections/issue11/boyd.html (6316 words) |