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A History of Japan: From Stone Age to Superpower A History of Japan: From Stone Age to Superpower by Kenneth G. Henshall
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A History of Japan Quotes Showing 1-30 of 53
“Yhere is a well-known saying in Japan that if a song-bird would not sing, Nobunaga would kill it, Hideyoshi would persuade it to sing, and Ieyasu would simply wait for it to sing.”
Kenneth Henshall, Storia del Giappone
tags: japan
“The impact Japan has had on the modern world is enormous. It occupies less than 1/300 of the planet's land area, yet at the height of its economic growth in the 1980s it wielded one-sixth of the planet's economic might, and remains the third ranking economy in the world.”
Kenneth Henshall, Storia del Giappone
tags: japan
“Japan's main strengths, then may be summarized as :

- pragmatism, especially flexibility and an ability to compromise and adapt
- a respect for the power of learning, particularly learning strengths of others
- a respect for ambition and achievement, including hard work
- a strong sense of nationhood
- an appreciation of the strength of the group
- a strong resilience
- an acceptance of authority
- an acceptance of hierarchy and inequality among individuals.”
Kenneth Henshall, Storia del Giappone
tags: japan
“At a national level this particularly so when those others seem to have something stronger or better than Japan does. It adopted, adapted and frequently improved, making the strengths of a potential competitor or foe intro own strengths.

This is not just a case of "know your enemy": it is a case of knowing what makes thy enemy a threat and then using his own strengths against him. More than a 1000 years ago Japan learned much from China, to the point where it was no longer a vassal nation but considered itself a superior one. It repeated the process some extent in the Tokugawa period, learning the use of firearms from the west. In the Meiji period iit furiously studied western imperial powers till it became one itself. After the war it learned much from America - admittedly with little choice to start with - but went beyond its compulsory lessons to the point where it reversed roles and became widely recognized as the master.”
Kenneth Henshall, Storia del Giappone
tags: japan
“Regarding video games, Nintendo has had a huge influence on young people around the world. The company is in fact much older than many might imagine. It started in 1889 as a card company, exactly a 100 years before it produced the Gameboy.”
Kenneth Henshall, Storia del Giappone
tags: japan
“A further embarrassing problem for Japan with regard to its wartime behavior was the prominent surfacing during the 90's of the "comfort women" (ianfu) issue. These women - mostly Korean, but including many from other Asian nations as well as some Dutch - were forced into the sexual servicing of Japanese troops. First of all the Japanese government denied any knowledge of this, but when confronted with documentation to the contrary (uncovered by a Japanese researcher) they conceded that they knew about it but were not involved. Then when confronted with further documentation categorically indicating the government's involvement, they had no alternative but to acknowledge the truth.”
Kenneth Henshall, Storia del Giappone
tags: japan
“In Japan the family has come apart and our sense of community has also disappeared... We are confused and lost. The response to that lostness is nationalism.”
Kenneth Henshall, Storia del Giappone
tags: japan
“The greatest boost for Japan's economy, however, came from another external source. In June 1950 communist North Korean troops crossed south of the 38th Parallel, the recognized dividing line between the zones of Korean Peninsula, and the Korean War started. Yoshida termed this a "gift of the gods".”
Kenneth Henshall, Storia del Giappone
tags: japan
“Many who might be considered more culpable were never brought to trial. Among those who escaped trial were the staff of the unit 731, who had conducted numerous biological and chemical warfare experiments on civilians and prisoners of war. The whole business of 731 was hushed up by the Americans, who offered immunity in return for scientific data from the experiments that their own ethics and laws prevented”
Kenneth Henshall, Storia del Giappone
tags: japan
“The first Japanese strike in the Pacific War was not against America at Pearl Harbor. It was against British Malaya. About 90mn before Pearl Harbor, some 5k Japanese troops successfully attacked a British force in Kota Bharu, in the Kelantan Sultanate.”
Kenneth Henshall, Storia del Giappone
tags: japan
“On 22 July 1941 it moved further south in Indochina, even though it realised this would probably provoke a reaction from the US. The official American response was to freeze Japanese assets in America and impose a comprehensive export embargo on American goods to Japan. These goods included the vital commodity oil. Japan depended on imports for than 90% of its oil and more than 3/4 of this imported oil came from the US.”
Kenneth Henshall, Storia del Giappone
tags: japan
“Antoher giant, Toshiba, started from a joint venture in the early 1900's between Americas's General Electric and two Japanese companies, Tokyo Electric and Shibaura Electric (part of Mitsui group).”
Kenneth Henshall, Storia del Giappone
tags: japan
“Meiji Japan's two best-known entrepreneurs, Iwasaki Yatar (1835-85), the founder of Mitsubishi... came from this type of peasant-samurai background.”
Kenneth Henshall, Storia del Giappone
tags: japan
“In spring 1894 the Korean king called for military aid from China to put down a rebellion led by a powerful religious sect. China duly sent troops. SO did Japan. Though the rebellion was soon quelled both parties refused to withdraw their troops. The Japanese seemed determined to fight and in July initiated military action against China by sinking a ship carrying Chinese troops. Japan officially declared war later, on 1 August. The Sino-Japanese War had begun.”
Kenneth Henshall, Storia del Giappone
tags: japan
“The self-help philosophy fitted perfectly with the sentiments of Fukuzawa Yukichi (1835-1901), one of Meiji Japan's most influential educators and advocates of westernisation. In his work Gakumon no Susume (An encouragement of learning) of 1872, he wrote :

There are no innate status distinctions between the noble and the base, the rich and the poor. It is only the person who has studied diligently, so that he has a mastery over things and events, who becomes noble and rich, while his opposite becomes base and poor.”
Kenneth Henshall, Storia del Giappone
tags: japan
“This lowly view of women was on reason why so many - if not most - samurai preferred homosexual relationships.”
Kenneth Henshall, Storia del Giappone
tags: japan
“Punishments in Europe at the time were also severe by modern standards, but severity of those in Japan was enough to shock many European visitors of the day. The Frenchman François Caron, who spent many years in Japan in the first half of the 17th century, wrote that "their punishments are roasting, burning, crucifying woth waies, drawing with 4 bulls and boiling in oil and water. Francesco Carletti, remarked : ... many suffered crucifixion on the slightest pretext, such as the theft of a radish... Sometimes also they crucify women, with babies at their breast, and leave them both to die in agony together.”
Kenneth Henshall, Storia del Giappone
tags: japan
“Offical embassies to China had already ceased in the 9th century, and no further missions were to take place for some centuries. It was felt that Japan had little left to learn from China at this stage.”
Kenneth Henshall, Storia del Giappone
tags: japan
“The use of the male pronoun above is deliberate, for the Chinese preferred their emperors to be male. This was one thing that was not modified in Japan. Although there were half of dozen reigning empresses in very early Japan, from 770 to the present only 2 females were to ascend the Japanese throne, both briefly and both in name only.”
Kenneth Henshall, Storia del Giappone
tags: japan
“It was during the age of Nara that Chinese writing led to the appearance of the first real books produced in Japan, the Kojiki and Nihon Shoki chronicles of 712 and 720. These were followed shortly afterwards by the first poetry anthologies, the Kaifosu (Fond Recollections of Poetry) of 751 and the Manyusho ( Collection of Ten Thousand Leaves) of 759. Some documents were even printed, another Chinese influence.”
Kenneth Henshall, Storia del Giappone
tags: japan
“Much of our knowledge of these kingdoms, as indeed of life in general in Yayoi Japan, is gleaned from Chinese documents. The first written mention of the country is found in the Han Shu (History of Han), a Chinese completed around AD 82. It referred to the land of Wa - meaning the land of dwarfs - as comprising a 100 of kingdoms, whose enjoys regularly brought tribute to the Chinese base at Lo-lang in Korea. A far more detailed description is given in the Wei Chih (History of Wei) of AD 297, in a section on "easterns barbarians" that also includes various peoples of Korea and Manchuria.”
Kenneth Henshall, Storia del Giappone
tags: japan
“In the 18th century Japan had the world's largest city, and world's most literate population.”
Kenneth Henshall, Storia del Giappone
tags: japan
“The suicide rate expressed in terms of 100k persons in 2009 was 26, 3 times the rate in Britain and 2,5 times the rate in the USA.”
Kenneth Henshall, Storia del Giappone
tags: japan
“Expressed another way, with different dates, crimes per 100k people in 1990 numbered 1'324, whereas in 200 the number had risen to 1'925.”
Kenneth Henshall, Storia del Giappone
tags: japan
“Japan's total land assets at the time were equivalent to no less than 60% of the entire land value of the planet - 200 times the 0,3% of the planet it occupies in geographical terms.”
Kenneth Henshall, Storia del Giappone
tags: japan
“Japan's economy continued to grow at around 4% during early 80's. Its trade surplus with America, which had started to develop since the late 70's, became massive, typically in order of US$ 40-50 billions.”
Kenneth Henshall, Storia del Giappone
tags: japan
“The Korean War had a number of other major consequences. One of these the rearmament of Japanese forces. The bulk of the Occupation troops were to be on duty in Korea, so to maintain security in Japan MacArthur ordered the formation of a National Police Reserve of 75k men in July 1950. In order not to breach Article IX of the constitution this was designated a self-defense unit but rearmament nevertheless caused considerable controversy. To clarify its defensive nature the unit was renamed the National Safety Forces in 1952 and finally given its present title of Self-Defense Forces (Jieitai) in 1954. ATthis point it contained some 165k personnel.”
Kenneth Henshall, Storia del Giappone
tags: japan
“Another major economic reform, seen as being in the interests of both demilitarization and democratization, was the move to dissolve the zaibatsu. At the end of the war tje Big Four - Mitsui, Mitsubishi, Sumimoto and Yasuda - controlled between them 25% of Japan's paid-up capital, and 6 lesser zaibatsu a further 11%.”
Kenneth Henshall, Storia del Giappone
tags: japan
“Erskine Caldwell's Tobacco Road, which showed the darker side of American society, was one example of the banned book, while samurai movies were among the 236 films condemned by Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers as feudalistic and militaristic. Alle reference do SCAP's involvement in government reforms were also prohibited.”
Kenneth Henshall, Storia del Giappone
tags: japan
“There was no real wish to dismantle the imperial institution itself, for this had a useful role in keeping the nation together, in maintaining national morale and also in legitimizing Occupation policy. The Japan specialists in the State Department were not unaware of the deep-rooted importance to Japanese people of the exercise of power being legitimized by high authority such legitimization, anarchy might prevail and expose the nation to communism.”
Kenneth Henshall, Storia del Giappone
tags: japan

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