Constructing East Asia: Technology, Ideology, and Empire in Japans Wartime Era, 1931-1945
English
By (author): Aaron Stephen Moore
The conventional understanding of Japanese wartime ideology has for years been summed up by just a few words: anti-modern, spiritualist, and irrational. Yet such a cut-and-dried picture is not at all reflective of the principles that guided national policy from 19311945. Challenging the status quo, Constructing East Asia examines how Japanese intellectuals, bureaucrats, and engineers used technology as a system of power and mobilizationwhat historian Aaron Moore terms a technological imaginaryto rally people in Japan and its expanding empire. By analyzing how these different actors defined technology in public discourse, national policies, and large-scale infrastructure projects, Moore reveals wartime elites as far more calculated in thought and action than previous scholarship allows. Moreover, Moore positions the wartime origins of technology deployment as an essential part of the country's national policy and identity, upending another predominant narrativenamely, that technology did not play a modernizing role in Japan until the economic miracle of the postwar years.
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