The story of Japan's rise to economic power begins with the rise of Premier Kakuen Tanaka, a fiery populist who was brought down by financial scandal but who out of government became even more powerful and passed on his legacy, until a new populist reformer arrived. 25,000 first printing.
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An American journalist's informed and eye-opening audit of Japan's de facto governance by unelected bosses during much of the postWW II era. Drawing on five years of experience as a Tokyo-based correspondent for the Wall Street Journal, Schlesinger first outlines the history of the Liberal Democratic Party, which effectively ran the island nation from 1955 until 1993. At the heart of the LDP's story is Kakuei Tanaka, the sometime prime minister who gained influence the old-fashioned way, i.e., by purchasing it with cash, favors, and public works projects. The author devotes more than half his text to the roguish, pragmatic populist who, before coming to grief (over a bribe from Lockheed Aircraft), created a political machine that dominated the LDP and hence Japan. Tanaka and his faction wielded clout sufficient to pick compliant prime ministers, fill key cabinet posts, and determine budget priorities. After the founding father faded from the scene during the early 1980s, a troika of remarkably talented pols (Shin Kanemaru, Ichiro Ozawa, and Noboru Takeshita) took control of the Tanaka coalition. While the shadow shoguns were masters at attracting billions of yen in campaign contributions, they proved inept at selecting prime ministers able to stay the course. At length, the Cold War's end, the implosion of Japan's so- called bubble economy, Western pressures for more open trade practices, and a series of sordid scandals helped put paid to the Tanaka bloc's unchallenged dominion. The days of the backroom power brokers are over, albeit with consequences that have yet to be reckoned with either in the archipelago or the wider world. An astute, accessible, and absorbing analysis of an insular nation's arrogant and corrupt political heritage. -- Copyright ©1997, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
This study, by a Wall Street Journal reporter who lived and worked in Japan from 1989 to 1994, offers a valuable perspective on Japanese politics in the postwar era and on the contemporary scene as well. The book's primary focus is the rise and fall of the powerful political machine created by Kakuei Tanaka, Japanese prime minister from 1972 to 1974. Although Tanaka fell from power as the result of a political scandal in 1976, his machine existed until the early 1990s, when it was overthrown in a reform movement led by Ichiro Ozawa, one of Tanaka's proteges and currently one of Japan's most powerful political figures. Schlesinger tells his story well, and the book can be generally recommended for all libraries.?Scott K. Wright, Univ. of St. Thomas, St. Paul, Minn.
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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Condition: very good, very good. First Edition. First Printing. 366, notes, selected bibliography, index, black mark on bottom edge, slight wear and soiling to DJ. Japan's postwar political machine was founded in the 1970s by Premier Kakuei Tanaka, a fiery populist who would be brought down by financial scandals. By the early 1990s, the machine had begun to creak and Japan fell into a deep recession as new scandals came to light. This book shows how the success and failure of Japan's political powers has helped to define a new age of competition and openness in Japanese politics. Shadow Shoguns is an arresting profile of an element of modern Japanese life little understood in the West: the relationship between economic superpowerdom and political corruption. In an astute and provocative piece of political reporting, Schlesinger, formerly of the Wall Street Journal's Tokyo Bureau, paints a vivid portrait of state as corporation. Seller Inventory # 45689