Five Gentlemen of Japan

Five Gentlemen of Japan

Author: Frank Gibney

Publisher: Tuttle Publishing

Published: 1997-05-15

Total Pages: 464

ISBN-13: 1462913334

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A newspaperman, an ex-Navy vice-admiral, a steel worker, a farmer, and the 124th Emperor of Japan himself--these are the fascinating heroes of Gibney's brilliant book about modern Japan. Strongly individual, every one of them, the five yet share the common inheritance of Japan's precocious but unstable past. Through their lives and attitudes, Gibney gives us an invaluable analysis of this new sovereign nation so suddenly thrown into the world's power conflicts. He helps us understand the historical and social forces which make Japan what she is today--the old contracts and loyalties from which each of the Five Gentlemen is struggling to break away from his country. Their courageous efforts to weld a new Japan from the remains of the old society, and to come to terms with the present, are as exciting as it is important.


Japan

Japan

Author:

Publisher: IBC PUBLISHING

Published: 2005-10

Total Pages: 164

ISBN-13: 9784925080934

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The four seasons of Japan, Japan from north to south, The history and culture of Japan.


Japan

Japan

Author: Keiichi Takeuchi

Publisher: Flammarion-Pere Castor

Published: 2004

Total Pages: 224

ISBN-13:

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From the end of the Pacific War in 1945 to the Tokyo Olympic Games in 1964, photography blossomed in Japan as the country underwent radical change. This is a comprehensive review of this period in Japanese photography offering a tribute to the nation's strength in the face of social upheaval.


Shinohata

Shinohata

Author: Ronald P. Dore

Publisher: Univ of California Press

Published: 1994-04-18

Total Pages: 342

ISBN-13: 9780520086289

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The spectacular changes that have occurred since World War II, occupation, and the achievement of industrial parity is meshed with revealing portraits of how the hamlet is structured, how it works, and what it means to live in this most elemental and formative of all Japanese social entities.


The Soil

The Soil

Author: Takashi Nagatsuka

Publisher: Univ of California Press

Published: 1994-01-29

Total Pages: 238

ISBN-13: 9780520914223

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Nagatsuka Takashi's novel The Soil, published in Japan in 1910, provides a moving and sensitive but unsentimental portrait of rural peasant life in Japan during the Meiji era. The community described is the author's native place, and the characters whose lives are described in vivid detail over a period of years are drawn from life.


Memories of Silk and Straw

Memories of Silk and Straw

Author: Junichi Saga

Publisher: Kodansha Amer Incorporated

Published: 1990

Total Pages: 258

ISBN-13: 9780870119880

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Over 50 reminiscences of pre-modern Japan. This book presents an illustrationf a way of life that has virtually disappeared.


A Day in the Life of Japan

A Day in the Life of Japan

Author: Rick Smolan

Publisher: Harper San Francisco

Published: 1985

Total Pages: 252

ISBN-13:

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Captioned photographs depict Japanese life during one twenty-four hour period in 1985.


Japanese Marxist

Japanese Marxist

Author: Gail Lee Bernstein

Publisher: Harvard Univ Asia Center

Published: 1990

Total Pages: 244

ISBN-13: 9780674471948

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It is the merit of Bernstein's portrait of Kawakami Hajime that he emerges as a recognizable human being, a truly modern figure reflecting in his own life a personal and hard-won balance between traditional Japanese values and the demands of modernization. The heir of a samurai family, an acknowledged authority on economics, a professor at one of Japan's leading universities, an early popularizer of Marxism in Japan, a Japanese Communist on his own unique terms, and, finally, the author of an autobiography that is a classic of modern Japanese literature, Kawakami Hajime is an important figure in the history of modern Japan. At each stage of Kawakami's winding path to Marxism--from patriotic nationalist to academic Marxist to revolutionary Communist--his concern for the ethical and economic problems that emerged in the course of Japan's astonishingly rapid industrialization dominated his consciousness. Bernstein provides a portrait of Kawakami's complex personality as well as an elegantly shaped narrative of the context and content of Japanese left-wing politics in the 1920s, and she makesplain the kinds of cultural conflict that modernization, in its several varieties, bequeathed to Japanese intellectuals.