Reconsidering Postwar Japanese History

Reconsidering Postwar Japanese History

A Handbook

After war defeat in 1945, Japan underwent historic political, economic and social transformations resulting in the country’s rebirth as an economic powerhouse and exemplar of liberal democracy in East Asia. This handbook expands and enriches our understanding of this tumultuous contemporary era in Japan’s modern history. Chapters in the volume ask novel theoretical questions and present fresh empirical perspectives on the era. How, for example, has the postwar era been chronologized to date and how might we rethink or enhance such interpretations? What can we learn by rethinking established moments and phases like the Allied Occupation, the period of high-speed economic growth, the 1970s, the Bubble Economy, and the “lost decades” of Heisei Japan (1989-2019)? What new issues might we introduce to subvert accepted understandings of the postwar era and its various sub-eras? Moreover, how might Japan’s internal postwar be expanded by rethinking the era through novel historical frameworks and regional imaginaries such as East Asian history, Cold War history, environmental history and transnational history? Contributors attempt to transcend temporal, geographical, intellectual and other boundaries inherent in our current understandings of Japan’s postwar experience to provide a compelling compilation of perspectives. Showcasing the work of historians and leading scholars from other disciplines, chapters cover thematic areas including the origins of the postwar era, postwar politics, society and popular culture, transnational and international interactions, and historical memory. The volume’s extensive chronological coverage, combined with the innovative perspectives of the contributors, make it essential reading for both researchers and learners interested in the multifaceted dynamics of Japan’s fascinating contemporary era.
  • Cover
  • Table of Contents
    • Contributors
    • Abbreviations
    • Preface
      • Simon Avenell
    • Introduction: Imagining Japan’s Postwar Era
      • Simon Avenell
    • Part 1: The Origins of the Postwar
      • Chapter 1: Rethinking Imperial Legacies and the Cold War in Allied Occupied Japan
        • Deokhyo Choi
      • Chapter 2: Money, Banking, and Fiscal Reforms in Allied Occupied Japan, 1945–1952
        • Simon James Bytheway
    • Part 2: The Political Postwar
      • Chapter 3: Arguing with Public Opinion: Polls and Postwar Democracy
        • Adam Bronson
      • Chapter 4: Japanese Postwar Political History from Left to Right
        • James Babb
      • Chapter 5: Nationalism under the Banner of Pacifism: Japanese Atomic Bombing Sufferers’ Struggle against the State
        • Akiko Naono
      • Chapter 6: Living with and Fighting against the Postwar Regime: Conservatism and Constitution in Postwar Japan
        • Christian G. Winkler
    • Part 3: Postwar Culture and Society
      • Chapter 7: Gendering Postwar Japan
        • Emily Barrass Chapman and Helen Macnaughtan
      • Chapter 8: Uncertain Futures, Destabilized Dreams
        • Eiko Maruko Siniawer
      • Chapter 9: Education in Japan since 1945: Equality, Hierarchy, and Competition
        • Peter Cave
      • Chapter 10: From Raincoats to Ketchup: The Encroachment of Plastics during the High-growth Era (1955–1973)
        • Katarzyna J. Cwiertka
      • Chapter 11: Birds and Children as Barometers of Japan’s Postwar Environmental History
        • Janet Borland
      • Chapter 12: Japan’s Got Talent: The Rise of Tarento in Japanese Television Culture
        • Seong Un Kim
    • Part 4: The Transnational Postwar
      • Chapter 13: Postwar Japanese Feminism in Transnational Perspective
        • Julia C. Bullock
      • Chapter 14: Postwar Japanese History Seen through the Science of Reproductive and Population Politics
        • Aya Homei
    • Part 5: Japan’s Postwar in Asia and the World
      • Chapter 15: Japan’s American Alliance: Forgoing Autonomy for Deterrence
        • H.D.P. Envall
      • Chapter 16: The Endless Postwar: Okinawa at the Modern Frontier
        • Luke Franks
      • Chapter 17: Orders, Borders and Japan’s Identity
        • Kimie Hara
      • Chapter 18: Manga, National Identity and Internationalization in Postwar Japan
        • Rebecca Suter
    • Part 6: Defining, Delineating, Historicizing and Chronologizing the Postwar Era
      • Chapter 19: Discourses of War and Peace during Japan’s “Postwar”
        • Philip Seaton
      • Chapter 20: Postwar in the Post-Cold War: Postwar in the Heisei Era
        • Eiji Oguma
    • Index

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