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Japan in the Fascist Era
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Table of Contents

Introduction; E.B.Reynolds The Fascist Era: Ideology and the Axis Alliance in Historical Perspective; J.P.Sottile Karagokoro - Opposing the 'Chinese Spirit': The Nativist Roots of Japanese Fascism; K.Antoni Peculiar Characteristics: The Japanese Political System in the Fascist Era; E.B.Reynolds Fascist and Quasi-Fascist Views in Interwear Japan, 1918-1941; C.W.A.Szpilman Japanese Ultra-nationalists and German Nazis: The Intellectual Dialogue; W.Skya The 'Jewish Problem' in Japanese-German Relations, 1933-45; G.Krebs

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About the Author

E. BRUCE REYNOLDS is Professor of History at San Jose State University, California, USA, where he teaches courses on Japan, China, Southeast Asia, and World War II and heads the East Asian Regional Materials and Resources Center (EARMARC). His publications include Thailand and Japan's Southern Advance, 1940-1945 and various articles and book chapters on World War II in Asia.

Reviews

"Not until recently have historians dared to approach Japanese fascism without ideological blinders. As a result, the postwar emphasis on Japan's peaceful, pragmatic, revolution from above is being transcended, as well as the distortions of Euro-centrism and the obsession with Japan's uniqueness. Drawing on a vast range of sources and analyses, six historians advance a new genre of scholarship, "Axis Studies," which unambiguously includes Japan. In chapters ranging from Japan's typically fascist ideology of superiority over the Chinese to its indigenous anti-Semitism, Reynolds and his colleagues make a splendid contribution to understanding both fascism and modern Japan. " - Chalmers Johnson, author of MITI and the Japanese Miracle "Originating in a 2002 Association for Asian Studies panel, Japan in the Fascist Era is an in-depth study focusing on Japan but in a comparative context involving Germany and Italy. Japan had no charismatic leader, as in Germany and Italy, but it did have a charismatic imperial institution. Likewise, Japan had no mass movement from below as in the 1922 March on Rome, but it did have a massive bureaucratic mobilization that quite possible was the envy of Germany and Italy. This series of excellent essays explores the deliberate irrationalism, militarism, organicism, and hierarchy that all Axis Alliance partners shared. Students of inter-war Japan as well as students of generic fascism will find this book most worthwhile." - David A. Titus, Wesleyan University

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