1st Edition

The Emperor's Adviser Saionji Kinmochi and Pre-War Japanese Politics

By Lesley Connors Copyright 1987
    272 Pages
    by Routledge

    284 Pages
    by Routledge

    Saionji Kinmochi was an aristocrat, a scholar and a progressive liberal politician who twice occupied the highest political office in the nation and who, during three decades, as adviser to three Emperors, coordinated and directed Japanese politics. His long life encompassed the emergence of the modern Japanese state, the establishment of the constitution, the integration of Japan into the inter-war, international community and the creation, and subsequent erosion of the democratic process. The story of his twilight years chronicles the conflicts between the goals of liberalism and internationalism which dominated Japanese politics in the 1920s and the right-wing militarism which held sway in the years leading to the Pacific War. He was a central figure in the turbulent, formative period of Japan’s political ideology.

     

    1. Saionji’s Emergence as Genro; The Saionji-Katsura Compromise  2. The Genro  3. Saionji’s Participation in the Genro Group 1913-1919  4. The Turning Point; Saionji’s Domination of the Genro Group  5. Saionji and the Last Genro; Party Governments and Saionji Diplomacy  6. The Saionji Group Under Attack  7. From Political Actor to Political Commentator; Saionji’s Last Years 1937-1940.  Summary and Conclusion. Notes.  Select Bibliography.  Index.

    Biography

    Lesley Connors