Modern Japanese history can be divided into four periods: 1600-1868: The period of the Tokugawa shôguns; feudal political order with economic and social change occurring in a gradual manner. This period saw growing urbanization, the spread of popular education and the rise of the merchant class. 1868-1890: The early Meiji period; rapid modernization and dramatic change of political, social, and economic institutions; meeting the challenge of the West by following its model. 1890-1945: Imperial Japan; constitutional polity with the emperor as reigning monarch; industrialization, urbanization, and an increasingly mobile society; drive for international status and world power, including imperialism in Asia and finally war with the United States. 1945-present: Contemporary Japan; democratic reform under the allied occupation; stable political democracy, high economic growth in the sixties and seventies followed by political instability and recession in the early nineties. Background to the Meiji Restoration: By the middle of the
nineteenth century, Japan's ruling Shogunate was a weak, feudal order,
unable to control all its own domains, much less defend the nation
against a threat from the Western powers. This threat materialized in
1853 with the arrival of Commodore Matthew Perry and a squadron of the
U.S. Navy demanding that Japan open commerce with the West. The result
was a series of "unequal" treaties in which Japan was forced
to concede special economic and legal privileges to the Western powers.
Beside Japan lay China--weak and humiliated, an example of what could
befall a great Asian nation unable to defend itself against Western
imperialism. Determined that Japan should not share China's fate, and
convinced that modernization depended on abolishing the feudal order, a
group of middle-ranking samurai overthrew the military government of the
Shôgun in 1868 and set Japan peaceably on a course of radical
modernization perhaps unparalleled in history. Carried out in the name
of restoring rule to the emperor, who then took the reign name
"Meiji" meaning "enlightened rule," the Meiji
Restoration was in many ways a profound revolution. The enthusiastic adoption of new Western technologies caused an explosion of industrial productivity and diversification. A national military and universal conscription were established. Compulsory public education was introduced both to teach the skills needed for the new nation and to inculcate values of citizenship in all Japanese. Imperial Japan: Industrialization and Expansion (1890-1930): This was a period of social and economic change within the constitutional monarchy established in 1890. As the original architects of the Restoration died, the various branches of the government began competing for power. An oligarchy bound closely by its members' shared conception of national purpose was replaced by an aggregate of interest groups--the Parliament, civil bureaucracy, military, and Imperial Household--all vying for the ear of the Emperor in whose name they administered the government. Japanese industry expanded, both in light export industries like textiles, which were necessary to pay for the raw materials needed from abroad, and also in heavy industries like steel and shipbuilding. Cities grew, as more Japanese moved from farming into jobs in factories and offices. In the countryside larger landlords came to own more and more land, and the number of poor tenants increased. Always dependent on foreign trade, Japan was hard hit by the world depression that began in 1929. The farmers who had grown the silk that was exported to the United States found no market for their product once the roaring twenties and the craze for silk stockings collapsed with the stock market crash. Japan's dramatic economic growth slowed, and social problems increased, especially in the countryside. At the same time that the leaders of imperial Japan pursued
modernization and economic growth, they continued to address the issue
of Japan's unequal status in the international order. In 1894, more than
forty years after Commodore Perry pried Japan open to the outside world,
Japan finally succeeded in revising the unequal treaties so that it
regained its legal parity with the Western powers. Japan fought a war
against China in 1894-95 over the control of Korea and gained Taiwan,
Japan's first colony. In 1902, Japan signed an alliance with Great
Britain, which signified a dramatic increase in international status,
and in 1904-5, Japan won a war against Russia, one of the major Western
powers. In the process Japan expanded its empire, annexing Korea in
1910. Japan was allied with the United States and Britain in World War
I, and expected territorial gains at the Versailles peace conference in
1919. Instead Japan met with strong opposition from the United States
and learned again the lesson that the West regarded imperialism very
differently if it was the imperialism of an Asian rather than a European
power. The failure of the Japanese to get a clause on racial equality
inserted into the covenant of the League of Nations was an insult that
was compounded in 1924 when the United States barred all Japanese from
immigration. Japan's Quest for Power and World War II in Asia: The
impatience of field commanders in Manchuria finally came to a head in
1931, when they used a local provocation as an excuse to put all the
Japanese territory in Manchuria under control of the military. The move
presented Japan's civilian government at home with an accomplished fact
which it could scarcely afford to reject. The military-industrial
machine went into high gear, pulling Japan out of its depression as it
continued to expand Japanese hegemony across the Far East. As Holland,
France, and Germany were enveloped in the turmoil in Europe, Japan
looked to replace them in Asia. Japanese troops invaded China in 1937,
and French Indochina in 1940, setting up puppet governments to
administer areas too vast to be controlled by the Japanese armies. By 1945, the U.S. forces were close enough to launch damaging bombing attacks from nearby islands against Japan itself. Its cities devastated by fire bombing, its economy barely functioning and its people on the brink of starvation, the Japanese government still held out hope that with the assistance of the Russians, Swiss, or Swedes they would be able to negotiate an end to the war. Unaware of the secret agreement among the allies at Yalta, Japan was shocked when Russia too entered the war against Japan. Two days earlier, the United States had dropped the first atomic bomb on Hiroshima, a medium-size industrial city. The day after the Russian declaration of war, the second atomic bomb was dropped on Nagasaki, the port city where Japan had first opened itself to Westerners. Japan agreed to unconditional surrender and the emperor himself went on the radio to make the announcement of surrender to the Japanese people. Postwar Japan (1945-1989): For the next seven years, the allied powers occupied Japan. After Japan's military forces were demobilized and repatriated, the Occupation, led by General Douglas MacArthur of the U.S. army, turned to the problem of making Japan democratic with the hope that its people would never again be led to fight a war of aggression. To that end, in 1947 a new constitution was adopted with two key provisions: sovereignty was transferred from the emperor to the people, and Japan as a nation renounced war and even the right to build up a military force capable of it. Under land reform, tenant farmers were given the land they worked and industrial workers were allowed to form trade unions. "Zaibatsu" or large business-combines which had been part of the military-industrial machine were partially dismantled. Democracy was popularized in the media and schools, and the "moral training" that had fostered extreme nationalism was abolished. Most of the reforms made under the Occupation have been retained by Japan. The United States changed some of the more liberal provisions it had encouraged early in the Occupation as it grew more fearful of Communism in the Cold War. With American support, Japan rebuilt many of its wartime industries to supply U.S. forces in the Korean War and entered into a security treaty with the United States which established Japan in an important role in America's Asian defense strategy. In 1952, the U.S. Occupation of Japan ended and by 1955 the Japanese economy had regained its highest prewar production levels, and a stable political system was established with the conservative and pro-American Liberal Democratic Party's control of the government. From the sixties through the mid eighties domestic politics were stable, and the Liberal Democratic Party maintained a solid majority in the Diet (parliament) and emphasized close relations with the United States as well as economic growth. Japan achieved record economic growth--averaging 10 percent a year until the seventies. Its economy grew from one less productive than Italy to the third largest in the world, behind only the United States and the Soviet Union. Growth was especially strong in heavy industry, such as steel, chemicals and machinery, and in high technology. Almost totally dependent on imports of food and energy, Japan began to face increasing protectionism abroad and serious pollution problems at home. Although Japan has brought pollution under control, trade frictions continued. As one of the most advanced post industrial societies in the world, the Japanese people enjoyed prosperity and the benefits of a thriving middle-class society. 1989 to present* "In 1989, in an entirely accidental coincidence, the Shôwa emperor, Hirohito, died, and the Berlin Wall fell, both in the same year. The death of the emperor, who had come to the throne in 1926, meant the end in Japan of the long era that had included the war, the transwar, and the postwar as well. And the close of the Cold War in the West meant the end of the global geopolitical system that had provided Japan international shelter within the American imperium. Two years later the economic "bubble" burst, and Japan went into a lengthy recession. Another two years passed, and the Liberal Democratic Party "fell," much the way the Shogunate had collapsed so many years ago, without a revolution. Six prime ministers held office between 1989 and 1996, an orderly turnover that was nonetheless routinely described as political "chaos." Japanese society was aging rapidly, its elderly increasing, and its birthrate dropping. The "1.57 shock" of 1990 brought fertility well below the level required for demographic replacement. Even more shocking to some was the increasing number of younger urban women who were refusing to marry or choosing not to bear children. The Gulf War of 1991 administered an international shock to Japan's Constitution, raising the post-Cold-War question of sending uniformed troops to participate in peacekeeping operations abroad and challenging the customary practices of postwar pacifism. And the nations of Asia, now increasingly important to Japan's economic and geopolitical relations, made ever more insistent demands on the Japanese to acknowledge and apologize for their earlier acts of colonialism and wartime aggression. . . . The years following 1989 will one day be viewed, no doubt, as another historical conjuncture of global import, not simply because the Cold War ended, but because so many other things were happening at the same time." * This section has been taken from "Japan's Modernities, 1850's-1990's," by Carol Gluck in Asia in Western and World History: A Guide for Teaching, eds. Ainslie T. Embree and Carol Gluck, Armonk: M.E. Sharpe, 1997
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