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A01=Ardath W. Burks
Author_Ardath W. Burks
Category=JP
consumer-oriented economy
Diet Members
economic transformation Japan
Edo Era
Eighth Century Nara
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Futabatei Shimei
GNP Growth Rate
Japan Sea Coast
Japan's Current Account Surplus
Japanese cultural identity
Japanese Economic Behavior
Japanese history
Japanese industry
Japanese society political economy analysis
Japanese tradition
JCP
JETRO
LDP
Liberal Democratic Party LDP
Long Sword
Meiji Japan
Meiji Modernizers
Minamoto Clan
Minamoto Yoritomo
modernization theory
NTT
postwar Japanese politics
Prime Minister Kaifu
SCAP
service-centered society
social change in East Asia
Tokugawa Feudalism
Tokugawa Hegemony
Tokyo Summit
UN
West Germany
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367003845
  • Weight: 630g
  • Dimensions: 149 x 226mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Jun 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Japan has been among the first of the handful of countries to move "beyond modern," and in this third edition of a much-praised book, Ardath Burks brings the blur of the nation's rapid change into focus. In his newly revised and updated Japan, Professor Burks also traces the history of the Japanese, exploring their traditions, their continuity, and their cultural heritage. He devotes a chapter to the remarkable "introspection boom" (Nihonron): the Japanese asking, "Who are we Japanese?" In discussing the country's swift modernization, the author looks not only at the initial transition from primary agriculture to an industrial economy but also at the current evolution into a service-centered society. On both domestic and international levels, the book evaluates the maturing of Japanese industry and its growing investment abroad, as well as the global tensions fueled by Japan's enormous trade surpluses. In response to the intense trade pressure it feels, the country is beginning to shift from export-driven growth to a consumer-oriented economy, a shift that will demand the building of a heretofore neglected, yet essential, infrastructure of housing and transportation. The author analyzes domestic political developments including the regime of Nakasone Yasuhiro and the fall of Takeshita Noboru and Uno Sousuke, precipitated by financial scandal within the majority Liberal Democratic Party (LDP). Burks assesses the formidable tasks facing the revamped ruling LDP as its new generation of younger leaders grapples with an evolving economy, an expanding regional role, and the dissatisfaction of women and young people who have begun to rebel against the growth ethic and their marginalized role in society. In his well-drawn, lucid portrait of this complex country, Professor Burks reflects on Japan as a nation in historical transition, envisioning a postindustrial future filled with friction and promise. As he writes in his introduction, "Americans and Japanese too often look
Ardath W. Burks is professor emeritus of Asian studies at Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey. In retirement he continues to consult, preparing political and investment risk surveys for Wall Street firms seeking to better understand Japan and its role in the world economy.