
Japan Since 1945
From Postwar to Post-Bubble
Bloomsbury Academic USA (Publisher)
Published on 20. December 2012
Book
Hardback
336 pages
978-1-4411-7524-3 (ISBN)
Description
Does Japan really matter anymore? The challenges of recent Japanese history have led some pundits and scholars to publicly wonder whether Japan's significance is starting to wane. The multidisciplinary essays that comprise Japan Since 1945 demonstrate its ongoing importance and relevance. Examining the historical context to the social, cultural, and political underpinnings of Japan's postwar development, the contributors re-engage earlier discourses and introduce new veins of research.
Japan Since 1945 provides a much needed update to existing scholarly work on the history of contemporary Japan. It moves beyond the 'lost decade' and 'terrible devastation' frameworks that have thus far defined too much of the discussion, offering a more nuanced picture of the nation's postwar development.
Japan Since 1945 provides a much needed update to existing scholarly work on the history of contemporary Japan. It moves beyond the 'lost decade' and 'terrible devastation' frameworks that have thus far defined too much of the discussion, offering a more nuanced picture of the nation's postwar development.
Reviews / Votes
Because of the quality of the individual contributions and its display of the current state of research, the book is without doubt a most warmly welcome and necessary addition to the reading lists of students and researchers of modern Japanese history. -- Till Knaudt, Heidelberg University * Japan Forum * An excellent interdisciplinary collection of essays on "postwar" Japan, from 1945 to 2011 - from the ashes of defeat to the anxiety of decline. It deserves to be read not only for its fascinating glimpses of Japanese society, economy and culture, but also for the comparative light it implicitly sheds on other advanced capitalist societies and their not always acknowledged arcs of uneven historical change. -- Carol Gluck, George Sansom Professor of History, Columbia University, USA The book's focus on the post-1945 period is a welcome update to the new-landmark 1993 collection Postwar Japan as History, which set the parameters of postwar Japanese historiography over the subsequent two decades. This volume may provide a similar function, engaging as it does with history's influence on and by other disciplinary approaches in recent decades, notably in the fields of transnational history and memory and heritage studies. -- Mark Pendleton, University of Sheffield, UK * The Historian *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Publishing group
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Target group
College/higher education
Dimensions
Height: 240 mm
Width: 161 mm
Thickness: 23 mm
Weight
669 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-4411-7524-3 (9781441175243)
DOI
CBID168506
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Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Timothy S. George is Professor of Japanese History at the University of Rhode Island, USA.
Christopher Gerteis is Senior Lecturer in the History of Contemporary Japan at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, UK.
Christopher Gerteis is Senior Lecturer in the History of Contemporary Japan at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, UK.
Content
Introduction: Revisiting Postwar Japan, Christopher Gerteis and Timothy S. George \ Part I: Civic Imaginations \ 1. The Art of Bourgeois Culture in Kamakura, Laura E. Hein \ 2. Furusato-zukuri: Saving Home Towns by Reinventing Them, Timothy S. George \ 3. Searching for Furusato History in Kaminoseki, Martin Dusinberre \ Part II: Legacies of War and Occupation \ 4. Dreaming Ryukyu: Shifting and Contesting Identities in Okinawa, David Tobaru Obermiller \ 5. Beyond Black Market: Neighborhood Associations and Food Rationing in Postwar Japan, Katarzyna Cwiertka \ 6. Nurses in Postwar Japan, Sally A. Hastings \ 7. Japan's Other Forgotten Soldiers, Tetsuya Fujiwara \ Part III: State Policy for a Late-Capitalist Society \ 8. The Post-Industrialization of the Developmental State, Lonny E. Carlile \ 9. Reassessing Japan's Big Bang: Twenty Years of Financial Regulatory Reform, Bruce Aronson \ 10. Endless Modernization: Japan's Postwar History of Fisheries Policy and Development, Satsuki Takahashi \ Part IV: Looking Out, Looking Back \ 11. Lofty Dreams: Pan American World Airways and Its Defining Presence in Postwar Japan, Christine Yano \ 12. Marketing History as Social Responsibility, Christopher Gerteis \ 13. Memorializing the Spirit of Wit and Grit in Postindustrial Japan, Hiraku Shimoda \ Conclusion, Stephen Vlastos