Research Catalog

Japan in war and peace : selected essays

Title
Japan in war and peace : selected essays / John W. Dower.
Author
Dower, John W.
Publication
New York : New Press : Distributed by W.W. Norton & Co., [1993], ©1993.

Items in the Library & Off-site

Filter by

1 Item

StatusFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
TextRequest in advance DS888.2 .D68 1993Off-site

Holdings

Details

Description
x, 368 pages : illustrations; 24 cm
Summary
  • More than any historian of his generation, John Dower has changed the way we view our relations with Japan. In his prize-winning War Without Mercy, Dower showed the depth of the racial antagonism that gave the war in the Pacific its particularly violent and brutal tone. In Japan in War and Peace, he examines unexplored continuities and connections in Japanese politics, economics, and society at large.
  • Drawing on decades of experience and research, Dower highlights resemblances between wartime, postwar, and contemporary Japan. He argues persuasively that the origins of many of the institutions responsible for Japan's dominant position in today's global economy derive from the rapid military industrialization of the 1930s and not from the post-Occupation period, as many have assumed.
  • The brilliant lead essay, "The Useful War," sets the tone for the volume by incisively showing how much of Japan's postwar political and economic structure was prefigured in the wartime organization of that country.
  • Japan in War and Peace goes beyond the popular images of Japanese culture - whether the idea of the "fanatical nation at war" or the mystified vision of a postwar "economic miracle" - to examine the tensions within Japanese society that have shaped its outlook toward the rest of Asia and the West.
  • These pathbreaking essays also deal with such subjects as Japanese wartime cinema, Japan's own hapless attempts to build an atomic bomb, the social upheaval revealed in the secret wartime records of the Thought Police, and the dynamics of the postwar U.S. Occupation of Japan
  • . Dower's final essays frankly discuss the stereotypes that Japan and the United States used to demonize each other during the war, which to this day play a role in their relations as allies. This new book from one of the foremost American observers of contemporary Japan is essential reading for all people attempting to understand a nation that has emerged as one of the superpowers in a fast-changing world.
Subjects
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents
1. The Useful War -- 2. Japanese Cinema Goes to War -- 3. "NI" and "F": Japan's Wartime Atomic Bomb Research -- 4. Sensational Rumors, Seditious Graffiti, and the Nightmares of the Thought Police -- 5. Occupied Japan and the Cold War in Asia -- 6. Yoshida in the Scales of History -- 7. Japanese Artists and the Atomic Bomb -- 8. Race, Language, and War in Two Cultures -- 9. Graphic Others / Graphic Selves: Cartoons in War and Peace -- 10. Fear and Prejudice in U.S.-Japan Relations -- 11. Postscript: Two Reflections on the Death of the Showa Emperor -- The Emperor in War and Peace: Views from the West -- Showa as Past, Present, and Future.
ISBN
1565840674
LCCN
92050821
OCLC
  • 27727396
  • ocm27727396
Owning Institutions
Columbia University Libraries