Episodes
This lecture will begin with a look at the political turmoil and unrest in Japan during the 1950s and 1960s that were resolved—or at least sublimated—by the 1970 paradigm. The early 1970s, just as this paradigm was taking root, witnessed major political and economic crises, the so-called “Nixon shocks” and oil shocks, which together formed a major turning point for postwar Japan. We will finish up by examining the bubble of the late 1980s and the crisis of national confidence that followed it...
Published 10/20/21
We will start off by looking at the road to surrender, and continue on to the road to reform and recovery. Along the way, we will consider the place of the atomic bombings in Japan’s defeat and surrender, and the radical reconstruction of Japan’s legal, political, economic, and social structures during the first years under the auspices of the US occupation. In particular, I emphasize the three Ds (democratize, demilitarize, and deconcentrate), and will also touch on the issue of the...
Published 10/18/21
Published 10/18/21
This lecture will consist of four distinct parts, arranged only partially in chronological order. The first will consist of a look at some of the less positive reaction to Japan’s rise and its victory over Russia. As we are reaching the end of the Meiji period in this lecture, this is a good time to look back on the imperial personage and institution as it was constructed over that time. That will take up the middle section of this lecture. The third part will return to the kind of more or...
Published 10/18/21
This lecture will examine the so-called “reverse course” taken by the American occupiers after 1947; the “1955 system” of rule by the Liberal Democratic Party and the related “iron triangle” of conservative politicians, bureaucrats, and big business; and finally the “economic miracle” of the period of high growth and the 1964 Tokyo Olympiad. Along the way, we will also touch on the War Crimes Tribunal and its place in postwar history.
Published 10/18/21
The Manchurian Incident (1931), the establishment of a puppet state in Manchuria (19329, and the decision to leave the League of Nations (1933) changed Japan’s international trajectory. In the 1920s, Japan had been a pillar of international collaboration and multilateralism. Now it was an aggressive outsider. International condemnation of Japan’s war in China (1931-1945) and the accompanying sanctions seemed to threaten Japan’s national security. In response, Japan attacked the United States...
Published 09/29/21
In this episode, we will be looking first at developments in Japanese society, starting with the murders and coup attempts of the period of “government by assassination.” Next, we will cover the transformation of Japan’s unofficial, undeclared China conflict into an all-out war in the summer of 1937, and the effects that this had. This will lead us right up to the Japanese attack on America’s naval base at Pearl Harbor.
Published 09/24/21
A bonus episode about gender roles and politics from Meiji to the 1930s, with a peek into the 1940s.
Published 09/11/21
This class will look at the ups and downs of Japanese history in the first decades of the twentieth century. Japan enjoyed military triumphs, a booming and industrializing economy, international prestige, and a lively cosmopolitan culture in its cities. There was also widespread protest and anger, a massive earthquake that destroyed Tokyo, a harsh crackdown on freedom of thought and expression, and urban-rural and other disparities were enormous and toxic. Examining these years will set the...
Published 09/04/21
The first half of this lecture looks at the political, social, and economic changes in Meiji Japan, focusing on the period from 1877 to 1895. Among other things, the second decade of Meiji witnessed the beginnings of backlash against the rapid pace of modernization and a nascent sense that something important and uniquely Japanese was being lost. To conclude, we bring Japan into the twentieth century, examining the Sino-Japanese and Russo-Japanese Wars (1894-1895 and 1904-1905) and their...
Published 08/19/21
In part 2 of our lectures on Meiji, we will begin to examine Japan’s “opening” to the West in the mid-nineteenth century, and the proactive ways that Japan engaged with this new challenge.
Published 08/18/21
In this episode, we will complete our look at the premodern period by examining the long peace and relative prosperity under the Tokugawa shoguns. This sets us up to examine Japan’s “opening” to the West in the mid-nineteenth century in the next episode, and the proactive ways that Japan engaged with this new challenge.
Published 08/18/21
1. Introduction: Jōmon to 1600 (27 August 2021) Overview This first class will be an overview of premodern Japanese history, from the Neolithic (Jōmon) period to the end of the period of samurai rule in the mid-nineteenth century. It will prepare us to talk about modern history in future classes. Unlike those classes, this week we will not focus on details, only on the broad contours of history. We will cover the following periods of Japanese history: Jōmon c.15,000BP-3000BP* Yayoi...
Published 08/18/21