Prime Minister represented political party
Inukai Tsuyoshi assassinated, May 15, 1932
Average of 9 out of 12 ministers from parties
No Prime Minister was a party politicians
Average of 3 out of 13 ministers from parties
Similarities with Germany and Italy (Gordon pp. 207-8)
Continuity between late 19th and mid- 20th c. imperialism
Taishō democracy of 1920s
Post-World War II democracy
Multilateral negotiations, 1920s
Unilateral militarism, 1930s
Withdrawal from League of Nations, Feb. 1933
Schools of thought: aberration vs. evolution
Theses
Top-down: Hirohito? Military? Bureaucracy?
Bottom-up: Public support?
Samuel Yamashita, Daily Life in Wartime Japan, 1940-1945
Treaty of Versailles, 1919
Retain Shandong, China
No racial equality clause
U.S. Exclusion Laws, 1924
Washington Conference on E. Asia, 1921-2
10:10:6 capital ship ratio
Open door policy in China
Japan gives up Shandong
London Naval Conference, 1930
10:10:6 capital ship ratio
10:10:7 cruiser ratio
Perceived need for markets and raw materials
Urban and rural crisis, 1929-1931
GDP fell 18%
Exports fell 50%
Price of silk fell 50%
15-20% unemployment
Gordon’s revisionist view (pp. 198-99)
GDP grows 50%, 1930-36
Rise of German Nazism and Italian Fascism
Rise of Soviet Union
Tokugawa
Sino-Japanese and Russo-Japanese Wars
Constitutional position of military
Factionalism within military
Control vs. Imperial Way factions
Navy vs. Army
Central command vs. Field officers
"National Defense Societies"
300,000 members, 1932
600,000 members, 1936
Assassinations
Prime Minister Inukai, 1932 “Kill the rich and annihilate the political parties”
Gen. Nagata Tetsuzan, 1935
Coup plots and mutinies
Two Twenty-Six Incident, Feb. 26, 1936
*Peace Preservation Law, 1925
75,000 arrested, 1930-45
Socialists and communists
Censorship
Propaganda
Public pressure to conform
Diet rubber stamps budgets
Media self-censorship
Samuel Yamashita, Daily Life in Wartime Japan, 1940-1945
“Time of emergency” (Gordon, 192)
“War Fever” (Louis Young, Japan’s Total Empire, Ch. 3)