This volume provides a perceptive background to modern Japanese culture. Ishida attempts a balanced evaluation of modern Japan, seeking to explain why the basic characteristics of Japanese society permit two almost opposite assessments. He divides the development of modern Japan into two stages: first, the period starting from the Meiji Restoration (1868) up to the end of World War II; second, from the defeat of Japan in World War II up to the present. Ishida investigates the essential features of the modern Japanese value system and the social structure, which comprise both traditional and modern elements. He examines how Japanese society has adapted Western influences to suit its own needs—the real “miracle” of modern Japan.
As the Japanese economy grows and Japan becomes an economic superpower, political self-confidence is also emerging. Ishida, however, remains critical of Japanese society, because he feels that Japan lacked the internal resources to change the political system from within until its defeat by the Allies forced it to introduce various reforms ordered by the occupation authorities. Despite the rapid changes taking place in Japanese society, certain attitudes, such as conformity and competition, are common to both the prewar and postwar periods.
The final section is devoted to the field of peace research. Ishida presents differences of meaning in the concepts of peace in ancient Hebrew, Greek, Roman, Chinese, and Indian cultures in order to characterize the Japanese concept of peace, which, akin to the Chinese, emphasizes harmony rather than justice. He goes on to discuss Japan’s images of Gandhi, which, according to the author, were projections of ultranationalist prejudice and missed the significance of his nonviolent direct action. Ishida emphasizes the importance of such nonviolent action as a means to carry out social change toward the realization of justice.
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Takeshi Ishida is professor emeritus of political science at the Institute of Social Science, University of Tokyo. He has been a visiting professor at the Free University of Berlin, the University of Arizona, St. Antony’s College (Oxford), and El Colegio de México, and a research associate at Harvard University. He is the author of Japanese Society (1971) and has published numerous books and articles on postwar Japan and comparative politics in English, Japanese, and French.
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Book Description hardcover. Condition: very good. Dust Jacket Condition: very good. 173pp. 8vo, cloth. New Brunswick: Transaction Books, 1983. Very good copy in a very good slightly tattered dust wrapper. Seller Inventory # 151922
Book Description Hardcover. Condition: Fine. Dust Jacket Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. hardback book and dust jacket in fine condition,still in original shrinkwrap. Seller Inventory # 303921
Book Description Hardcover. Presumed first edition/first printing. xviii, 173 p. Notes. Bibliography of Takeshi Ishida. Index. This volume by one of the most prominent Japanese social scientists provides a perceptive background to modern Japanese culture. Very good in very good dust jacket. DJ has slight wear and soiling. Seller Inventory # 60432