Aftermath of war : mericans and the remaking of Japan, 1945-1952 / Howard B. Schonberger.
Material type:
- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9781612770246 (e-book)
- 327.73052 19
- DS889.16 .S366 1989
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Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
With the fighting in World War II over in mid-August 1945, more than one-half million American troops moved to occupy Japan. Much of the country was ruined, buried under the rubble and debris of saturation bombing and the atomic blasts over Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Japan's rulers were stunned by defeat, and its people resigned to whatever the victors might impose upon them. Aftermath of War described the American transformation of Occupied Japan to be the greatest success story of United States policy in Asian. Howard Schonberger argues that this success came at a high price. Many of the popularity supported democratic reforms promoted by Americans in the early years of the Occupation were scuttled. Asian peoples developed a fear of the new Japan as a junior partner of the United States in opposing their legitimate revolutionary aspirations. Finally Japanese exports have triggered a dangerous xenophobic reaction in the United States in recent years. Schonberger recounts the rise of the new Japan through the eyes of eight Americans centrally engaged in events of the Occupation. Aftermath of War provides insights into the recent conflicts between the U.S. and Japan and recaptures the ideological debate within the United States over the future course of Japan. It implicitly suggests that Americans and Japanese seriously reconsider the post-surrender reform agenda rejected by official American policy after 1947.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Description based on print version record.
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, MI : ProQuest, 2016. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest affiliated libraries.
Reviews provided by Syndetics
CHOICE Review
Scholarship on the American occupation of Japan falls into three categories: conservative, progressive, and New Left. In this pioneering study, through an examination of seven men who made important contributions to occupation policy, Schonberger places these schools of interpretation into balance. His subjects are General Douglas MacArthur, Joseph Grew, T.A. Bisson, James S. Killen, Harry F. Kern, William Draper Jr., Joseph M. Dodge, and John Foster Dulles. Schonberger argues that MacArthur's actions were motivated more by a desire to win the presidency than by a wish to reform Japan. The author also believes that by 1948, a good case could have been made for a "reverse course" toward reforming Japan. The Korean conflict accelerated the reverse course and led to lax enforcement of many of the early reforms. Ultimately, the early goal of turning Japan into a Switzerland of Asia fell by the wayside, as conservative decision-makers sought through rearmament to keep Japan out of the Soviet sphere. The book is not a history of the US occupation, but rather an effort to understand what motivated individual American policymakers. An excellent work for upper-division undergraduates and above. R. H. Detrick University of North TexasThere are no comments on this title.