1st Edition

Modern Japan A Social History Since 1868

By J.E. Thomas Copyright 1996
    352 Pages
    by Routledge

    352 Pages
    by Routledge

    J E Thomas examines the historical roots of Japanese social structures and preoccupations and he sets these within the broad chronological framework of Japan's political and military development. The book can thus serve as an introduction to modern Japan in a more general sense - but its focus throughout is on the people themselves. Professor Thomas gives due attention to the Japanese mainstream; but he also discusses those other sections of the community which have traditionally been underprivileged or marginalised - most obviously women, but also minority groups and outcasts - and the Japanese attitude to foreigners beyond her shores.



    1. Out of Isolation.  2. Racism and the Case of the Ainu.  3. Towards a New Japan.  4. Japan's Outcasts.  5. ' All Citizen's are soldiers': The Rise of the Military.  6. 'No Two People on Earth Liked Each Other Less' - Japan and Korea.  7. The Military and the Death of Democracy.  8. 'The Wish of the Dead Child': Women in Japan.  9. 'Hakko Ichiu' - The Pacific War.  10. Education and 'The Fundamental Character of Our Empire'.  11. Modern Japan.

    Biography

    J.E. Thomas