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The Japanese Today: Change and Continuity, Enlarged Edition Paperback – March 5, 1995

4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars 20 ratings

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Japan, like the rest of the world, has undergone enormous changes in the last few years. The impact of the end of the Cold War has combined with a worldwide recession to create a fluid situation in which long-held assumptions about politics and policies no longer hold. A classic, short history of Japan, this book has been brought up-to-date by Marius Jansen, now our most distinguished interpreter of Japanese history. Jansen gives a lucid account and analysis of the events that have rocked Japan since 1990, taking the story through the election of Murayama as prime minister.

About the previous edition:

With the two-thousand-year history of the Japanese experience as his foundation, Edwin O. Reischauer brings us an incomparable description of Japan today in all its complexity and uniqueness, both material and spiritual. His description and analysis present us with the paradox that is present-day Japan: thoroughly international, depending for its livelihood almost entirely on foreign trade, its products coveted everywhere―yet not entirely liked or trusted, still feared for its past military adventurism and for its current economic aggressiveness.

Reischauer begins with the rich heritage of the island nation, identifying incidents and trends that have significantly affected Japan’s modern development. Much of the geographic and historical material on Japan’s earlier years is drawn from his renowned study
The Japanese, but the present book deepens and broadens that earlier interpretation: our knowledge of Japan has increased enormously in the intervening decade and our attitudes have become more ambivalent, while Japan too has changed, often not so subtly.

Moving to contemporary Japanese society, Reischauer explores both the constants in Japanese life and the aspects that are rapidly changing. In the section on government and politics he gives pithy descriptions of the formal workings of the various organs of government and the decision-making process, as well as the most contentious issues in Japanese life―pollution, nuclear power, organized labor―and the elusive matter of political style.

In what will become classic statements on business management and organization, Reischauer sketches the early background of trade and commerce in Japan, contrasts the struggling prewar economy with today’s assertive manufacturing, and brilliantly characterizes the remarkable postwar economic miracle of Japanese heavy industry, consumer product development, and money management. In a final section, “Japan and the World,” he attempts to explain to skeptical Westerners that country’s growing and painful dilemma between neutrality and alignment, between trade imbalance and “fair” practices, and the ever-vexing issue of that embodiment of Japanese specialness, a unique and difficult language that affects personal and national behavior.


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Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

A leading scholar on Japan updates Reischauer's classic (LJ 1/88).
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review

Praise for the previous edition:

Edwin Reischauer displays a novelist’s sensitivity in this thorough overview, managing to explain the paradoxes of Japan without diminishing the sense of mystery…
The Japanese Today offers the broadest available overview of the world’s third greatest economic power, sagaciously exploring politics, history, religion, and education.”Los Angeles Times

“[Reischauer] is one of few Westerners who knows so well the social, cultural, political, and economic developments of Japanese society.”
Badar A. Iqbal, Japan Times

“For many years Americans headed for careers in Japan have been preparing themselves with the books of Edwin O. Reischauer. Few people know the subject better than he.”
John Burgess, Washington Post Book World

“Born and brought up in Japan and, in the 1960s, American ambassador to Tokyo, [Reischauer] is well placed to analyze the special qualities of a people who down the years have fluctuated between self-deprecation and an almost cosmic arrogance, and who now seem poised to achieve dominance over the global economy.”
Alexander MacLeod, London Sunday Times

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Harvard University Press; 3rd edition (March 5, 1995)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 471 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0674471849
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0674471849
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.55 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.14 x 1.18 x 9.21 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars 20 ratings

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Customer reviews

4.2 out of 5 stars
20 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on November 7, 2013
I have this book for one of my college course. This book is really helpful because it gives brief introductions to everything about Japan. From history to modernity, from business to government- it covers all you want to know. Plus, the words are simple and it is very easy read. I recommend this to those who are interested in Japan.
Reviewed in the United States on February 10, 2021
I needed this book for school. It is in great condition.
Reviewed in the United States on June 11, 2018
As described
Reviewed in the United States on October 8, 2010
This book is an observation of Japanese society written by an an American who grew up in Japan, who spoke and taught Japanese, who married Japanese, who served as US Ambassador to Japan, who was popular in Japan, and whose first printing of this book sold a quarter of a million copies in Japan.
2 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on January 18, 2017
great
Reviewed in the United States on May 5, 2001
Having lived for more than six years in Japan, and being fluent in Japanese, I have a quite clear idea of the society there. This book is not only too old, but it shows that Reischauer (like the other members of the Chrysantemum Club) has a one-sided point of view, and is still ganging with the American "reformists" that put Japan back on the rails (so to say...) during the occupation. Of course Reishauer knows quite a lot about Japan, but he tells only what he thinks is important to him and to his old-fashion Orientalist group. Read any Murakami or Yoshimoto to understand on your own how this book is very superficial. There are much better and objective introductions to the complex Japanese reality.
31 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on July 21, 2008
Note: This review was published in 1988 and is of the first edition. Nothing that has happened in the past 20 years causes me to change it.

It is often said that Americans ought to learn more about other countries. It could start at the White House.
In January 1987, I listened to Alan Reynolds, one of the Reagan administration's economic advisers and a pundit who frequently writes for the op-ed page of The Wall Street Journal, predict a dismal future for Japan. The country's economy was, he said, "pretty sick>\."
"It's sad."
Well, a nation doesn't have to be smart, tough, tenacious, adaptable and farseeing to outperform a rival that takes advice from people like that. Since Japan is all those and more, it's been no contest.
The eyes of the world are on Japan because of what it has done. And according to America's No. 1 authority on Japan, Edwin Reischauer, the eyes of Japan are also on Japan. Always self-conscious, success has made the Japanese even more so.
Reischauer, however, does not give a high rating to most the "explanations" of Japan and its 122 million inhabitants. So he has had to update his well-received book of 1978, "The Japanese."
In a world that is increasingly homogenized, the Japanese stand out. Reischauer finds in them at least 15 characteristics that are the biggest or best, from best educated population to "world's most enthusiastic diarists."
He contends that the key Japanese value is harmony. Other observers think that the Japanese are just as contentious as anybody else, they just work out their conflicts in a different way. Certainly their military and economic competitiveness suggests that they regard harmony in a utilitarian way rather than something good in itself, the way the Burmese, for example, behave.
Contrived or not, the harmonious efforts of the Japanese have created a goal-directed society that lets very little stand in its way.
This is not always a good thing: It wasn't when the goal was the "Greater East Asia Co-prosperity Sphere." But in our more peaceful era the Japanese went from starvation to ease in 15 years, from ease to wealth in another 20.
The usual contradictions accompanied the change, which has been the fastest experienced by any large nation. Reischauer points out that although the Japanese are unusually aware of the beauties of nature, they often trample famous places in their enthusiasm to see them, and during their economic buildup they allowed some of the worst pollution anywhere.
Japanese wealth, too, like ruined perfect vistas, is in some ways more theoretical than real. Reischauer says that one-third of Tokyo apartments are only 11 by 11 feet and lack flush toilets.
"Japan has not been Westernized, as is commonly asserted," he writes. "Nothing is more central to traditional Western culture than Christianity, but less than 2 percent of the Japanese have embraced this religion. What the Japanese have taken over are the modern aspects of Western culture."
Also its problems. Japan faces three present crises and one potential one.
The potential crisis is war. Because of its lack of resources (it cannot feed itself and has no oil or ores), Japan's prosperity could collapse overnight in case of conflict.
Of the crises already requiring action, Reischauer pays attention to only one: housing. Because of the lack of space and jerry-building, "actual 'living standards' in Tokyo may be quite a bit lower than per capita GNP figures would suggest," he writes.
He barely mentions the status of women (very low) or the aging of the population.
But the Tokugawa era, when Japan shut out the world, is over. The Japanese can see that in the rest of the world, even parts that are not especially rich, the houses are comfortable and the women more or less control their own lives. Expectations are rising, but at the same time the nation must support a larger and larger group of retirees.
There may not be a social revolution, but the ingredients are there for an unhappy society. And as usually happens with very successful people, the Japanese tend to be blinded by their own myths.
Reischauer, too, sometimes. He repeats the line that the Japanese workers are diligent, motivated and cooperative, singing the company song each morning with genuine enthusiasm.
These singalongs begin to have the aspect of Potemkin villages, however.
Not many foreigners get on Japanese factory floors, except to hear the songs. Even fewer of them understand the language. Very few indeed have unrestricted access to Japanese plants, know the language and keep that knowledge to themselves.
These few learn interesting things. One of them told me that, when the boss and the visitors are not around, Japanese factory workers goof off at about the same rates as Americans.
Reischauer worries about what the rest of the world often describes as Japanese arrogance. He doesn't agree that that is the right word, but he says, "The isolation and resulting uniqueness Japan has experienced throughout its history turns out to be the main problem it must contend with today."
That is, the Japanese proved to be well adapted to solving the problems they faced in 1945, but they may not be as well equipped for the problems of the 1990s. Like an uncertain tightrope walker, they can keep upright as long as they rush forward, but if the slow down or stop the worry that they will fall.
Having attained wealth, power and prestige, they now much find equilibrium.
4 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on September 6, 2016
Ok book. Nothing special.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing book
Reviewed in Spain on September 16, 2017
Although some of the later chapters are obviously out of date, it stil gives a clear, engaging insight into all aspects of Japan and is a very interesting read overall. I would highly reccoment this as a starting point to anyone interested in reading about Japan.