Japan Thrice-Opened: An Analysis of Relations Between Japan and the United States

Japan Thrice-Opened: An Analysis of Relations Between Japan and the United States

by Hideo Ibe
Japan Thrice-Opened: An Analysis of Relations Between Japan and the United States

Japan Thrice-Opened: An Analysis of Relations Between Japan and the United States

by Hideo Ibe

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Overview

A history of Japan-United States relations from the point of view of a pro-American Japanese scholar, this work is designed to serve as an analysis of the current situation—the third opening of Japan to the West in the last century. The two earlier openings failed when Japan adopted the policy of sonno-joi (which means literally revere the emperor and expel the foreigners). This book is written to try to forestall the very real possibility of a recurrence of sonno-joi: as a reaction to the current opening by appealing to both the Japanese and the Americans to understand Japanese history and Japanese sensibilities.

Japan and the United States share many interests and goals, but they suffer from a tremendous gap in mutual perceptions. Ibe makes an attempt here to explain the Japanese and their view of the world to a non-Japanese audience. He believes Japan is not an inexplicable riddle nor a monolith Japan, Inc. He argues that since time immemorial, forging unity among the many warring groups in Japan has been difficult, whether uniting the warlord clans of the ancient period, the feudalistic domains of premodern times, the political factions of the modernizing period, or the private corporations or government ministries of today. Ibe examines the difficulties the Japanese have encountered in their efforts to unify and to articulate their desires—which is not well understood by non-Japanese. This book is ideal for students, scholars, and the informed citizen interested in Japan and Japanese-American relations.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780275931780
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 03/23/1992
Series: Gerontology; 15
Pages: 296
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.75(d)

About the Author

Hideo Ibe is professor emeritus and former president of the Japan College of Social Work, as well as the president of both the Research Institute for Policies on Aging and the Research Foundation on Social Welfare. He is also president of the International Leadership Center on Longevity and Society (Japan), a cooperating organization with the Center of the same name in the United States headed by Pulitzer Prize winner Robert N. Butler. Ibe earned his PhD at the School of Economics, Keio University. His publications in Japanese include Social Planning (1964), Women and Pensions (1975), A Treatise on New Poor Law (1979), Future Prospects of Social Welfare (1987), and Social Security in 50 Years (1987).

Table of Contents

Introduction
The Japanese Social Ethos
Threat from the Sea
Establishment of the Meiji Regime
The Russo-Japanese War (1904-5)
Taishõ Democracy
The Shòwa Restoration
Breakup of U.S.-Japanese Relations
The Pacific War
The Occupation and Postwar Society
Japan's Future Course
Chronology
Selected References
Appendices
Index

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