Manchu culture with a surviving Manchukuo

250px-Manchukuo_map.png


Let's say that by some reason Manchukuo survives until modern day, probably still as a japanese puppet, how is not important for this scenario

In this case how Manchukuo would look like today? And the Manchu culture and language? The number of manchu speakers were declining rapidly since the 19th century, could they revive their language, or use a mix of manchu with mandarin ?
 

RousseauX

Donor
250px-Manchukuo_map.png


Let's say that by some reason Manchukuo survives until modern day, probably still as a japanese puppet, how is not important for this scenario

In this case how Manchukuo would look like today? And the Manchu culture and language? The number of manchu speakers were declining rapidly since the 19th century, could they revive their language, or use a mix of manchu with mandarin ?
by the 1930s Manchuria was something like 90%+ ethnic Han population, you are more likely to have the language being some dialect of Chinese from where han settlers came from than manchu
 

CaliGuy

Banned
250px-Manchukuo_map.png


Let's say that by some reason Manchukuo survives until modern day, probably still as a japanese puppet, how is not important for this scenario

In this case how Manchukuo would look like today? And the Manchu culture and language? The number of manchu speakers were declining rapidly since the 19th century, could they revive their language, or use a mix of manchu with mandarin ?
The culture of Manchukuo in this TL would probably be a blend of Chinese and Japanese--perhaps with some Korean culture thrown in there as well.
 
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