Empire and Constitution in Modern Japan: Why Could War with China Not Be Prevented?
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | English |
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London ; New York ; Oxford ; New Delhi ; Sydney
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
2021
|
Ausgabe: | First edition |
Schriftenreihe: | SOAS Studies in Modern and Contemporary Japan Ser
|
Online-Zugang: | DE-2070s |
Beschreibung: | 1 Online-Ressource (175 Seiten) |
ISBN: | 9781350136229 9781350136236 9781350136243 |
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a Empire and Constitution in Modern Japan |b Why Could War with China Not Be Prevented? |c Junji Banno ; translated by Arthur Stockwin |
250 | |a First edition | ||
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505 | 8 | |a Intro -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Introduction -- Part 1: The beginnings of 'Empire' and 'Constitution' -- Chapter 1: Defeating China - towards a 'small empire' -- Split in the new Meiji government -- The Japan-China confrontation over Ryūkyū - the Taiwan expedition -- Ōkubo Toshimichi's peace negotiations -- Chapter 2: Demanding a constitutional system of government -- The Ōsaka Conference -- The Imperial Edict establishing a constitutional structure -- The Edict establishing a Parliament: Ending of the constitution-building period -- From the Kanghwado Incident to the Popular Rights Movement -- Miscalculation by Inoue Kaoru -- Fukuzawa Yukichi and Inoue Kaoru -- Alienation - postponing the establishment of a Parliament -- Chapter 3: The Imo (Jingo) and Kapsin (Kōshin) Incidents - 'Empire' once again -- The China threat argument and the return of the 'strong army' argument -- Changing relationship between Japan and Korea, and advent of confrontation between Japan and China -- The subtle 'Asianism' of Fukuzawa Yukichi: Underestimation of China -- China becoming a 'strong power' - the Imo [Korean] or Jingo [Japanese] Incident -- Towards naval rearmament -- Breakdown in the reform of Korea - the Kapsin [Korean] or Kōshin [Japanese] Incident -- If war breaks out, is victory assured? -- Avoidance of war by Itō Hirobumi - the Tianjin Treaty -- Chapter 4: The Sino-Japanese War: The birth of 'Empire' and the continuation of 'Constitution' -- Towards military expansion before launching the Diet -- Dispute between the House of Representatives and the government - stagnation of military expansion -- The Imperial Edict on Harmony and Cooperation -- Europeanization and nationalism -- Towards the Sino-Japanese War -- Opposition from the Meiji Emperor -- The conclusion of the war -- The Japan-China Treaty and the triple intervention | |
505 | 8 | |a Part 2: The division between 'Empire' and 'Constitution' -- Introduction: The system of apportionment between peace and democracy -- Chapter 5: Strong army and war weariness: 'Empire' and 'Constitution' before the Russo-Japanese War -- 'Constitution' did not aspire to 'Empire' -- Neither the government nor the people wanted to fight a war with Russia -- Expansion of the army and navy following the Sino-Japanese War -- Why did the navy speed up its rearmament? -- Chapter 6: From the Russo-Japanese War to the First World War: Struggle between 'Empire' and 'Constitution' -- Going to war with powerful Russia -- Korea becoming a protectorate, and the partition of Manchuria -- The Imperial Defence Policy -- Where were the real potential enemies? -- The 1923 crisis -- Naval stratagems -- We shall not make 'War' but we shall pursue 'Rearmament' -- Resistance to Taishō democracy and compromise with it -- Iaku jōsō - Did the Imperial Defence Policy without cabinet recognition have no influence? -- Positive policy and rearmament -- The Katsura-Saionji system - the Katsura bureaucratic clique plus the army versus the Saionji Seiyūkai plus the navy -- The emergence of urban commerce and industry -- The pluralization of conflicts of interest -- Progress of the democratization movement -- Chapter 7: From the Taishō Political Change to the Siemens Affair: Stagnation of 'Empire' and Surge of 'Constitution' -- Twin deficits -- Why was public opinion lenient towards the navy, but severe towards the army? -- Concentrated fire in favour of military rearmament -- The Taishō Political Crisis -- From the army to the navy -- The 'positive policies' of the Yamamoto Gonbei government -- The Siemens Affair -- The revenge of the House of Peers -- The collapse of both the navy cabinet and the Seiyūkai | |
505 | 8 | |a Chapter 8: The twenty-one demands to China: 'Constitution' domestically, 'Empire' externally -- The rise of Yoshino Sakuzō -- The argument about introducing universal suffrage -- Key points of 'Constitution' -- From 'Constitution' to 'Empire' -- The First World War and the twenty-one demands to China -- Disdain for China, disdain for America -- A strange political party - split between peace and democracy -- Part 3: The End of 'Constitution' and 'Empire' -- Introduction: Japan between the two wars -- Chapter 9: What happened between the two world wars? -- A new world order -- The great conversion of the Seiyūkai -- The failure of Shidehara diplomacy - the Manchurian Incident -- The formal recognition of Manchukuo -- The London Naval Disarmament Treaty -- Failure of the policy of not allowing the affair to spread -- The 5-15 Incident and the death of party cabinets -- The influence of the 2-26 Incident -- The abortive Ugaki Kazushige Cabinet -- The Marco Polo Bridge Incident and despatch of three Japanese divisions -- Full-scale war without a war declaration -- Chapter 10: Three episodes between the two world wars -- First period: 'Constitution' and 'non-Empire' under the Hara Kei Cabinet -- A fundamental shift in China policy -- The argument that the General Staff Office should be abolished -- Second period: Counterattack in favour of 'Empire' under the cabinet of Tanaka Giichi -- The plan to take over Manchuria and Mongolia -- Third period: The clash between 'Constitution' and 'Empire' over the Manchurian Incident -- Control of the Kantōgun at one point succeeded -- An unfortunate chain of small mistakes -- Stimson's failure -- Breakdown of the non-expansion policy -- Extinction of 'epochs' -- The upsurge of the Shakai Taishūtō (Social Masses Party) -- How can democracy stop war? -- Conclusion: Irresponsible 'Empire' without 'Constitution' | |
505 | 8 | |a Points and lines -- A lengthy war of attrition - why did a peace settlement prove impossible? -- The Japanese people became a different people -- Peace settlement opinion -- Anti-Japanese sentiment -- The growing strength of the Chinese Communist Party -- I am now nostalgic about the old days I used to hate so much -- There should be no war between Japan and China -- Notes -- Introduction -- Chapter 1 -- Chapter 2 -- Chapter 3 -- Chapter 4 -- Introduction to Part 2 -- Chapter 5 -- Chapter 6 -- Chapter 7 -- Chapter 8 -- Chapter 9 -- Chapter 10 -- Conclusion -- Index | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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author | Banno, Junji 1937-2020 |
author_GND | (DE-588)14089439X (DE-588)112550320 |
author_facet | Banno, Junji 1937-2020 |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Banno, Junji 1937-2020 |
author_variant | j b jb |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV047698360 |
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contents | Intro -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Introduction -- Part 1: The beginnings of 'Empire' and 'Constitution' -- Chapter 1: Defeating China - towards a 'small empire' -- Split in the new Meiji government -- The Japan-China confrontation over Ryūkyū - the Taiwan expedition -- Ōkubo Toshimichi's peace negotiations -- Chapter 2: Demanding a constitutional system of government -- The Ōsaka Conference -- The Imperial Edict establishing a constitutional structure -- The Edict establishing a Parliament: Ending of the constitution-building period -- From the Kanghwado Incident to the Popular Rights Movement -- Miscalculation by Inoue Kaoru -- Fukuzawa Yukichi and Inoue Kaoru -- Alienation - postponing the establishment of a Parliament -- Chapter 3: The Imo (Jingo) and Kapsin (Kōshin) Incidents - 'Empire' once again -- The China threat argument and the return of the 'strong army' argument -- Changing relationship between Japan and Korea, and advent of confrontation between Japan and China -- The subtle 'Asianism' of Fukuzawa Yukichi: Underestimation of China -- China becoming a 'strong power' - the Imo [Korean] or Jingo [Japanese] Incident -- Towards naval rearmament -- Breakdown in the reform of Korea - the Kapsin [Korean] or Kōshin [Japanese] Incident -- If war breaks out, is victory assured? -- Avoidance of war by Itō Hirobumi - the Tianjin Treaty -- Chapter 4: The Sino-Japanese War: The birth of 'Empire' and the continuation of 'Constitution' -- Towards military expansion before launching the Diet -- Dispute between the House of Representatives and the government - stagnation of military expansion -- The Imperial Edict on Harmony and Cooperation -- Europeanization and nationalism -- Towards the Sino-Japanese War -- Opposition from the Meiji Emperor -- The conclusion of the war -- The Japan-China Treaty and the triple intervention Part 2: The division between 'Empire' and 'Constitution' -- Introduction: The system of apportionment between peace and democracy -- Chapter 5: Strong army and war weariness: 'Empire' and 'Constitution' before the Russo-Japanese War -- 'Constitution' did not aspire to 'Empire' -- Neither the government nor the people wanted to fight a war with Russia -- Expansion of the army and navy following the Sino-Japanese War -- Why did the navy speed up its rearmament? -- Chapter 6: From the Russo-Japanese War to the First World War: Struggle between 'Empire' and 'Constitution' -- Going to war with powerful Russia -- Korea becoming a protectorate, and the partition of Manchuria -- The Imperial Defence Policy -- Where were the real potential enemies? -- The 1923 crisis -- Naval stratagems -- We shall not make 'War' but we shall pursue 'Rearmament' -- Resistance to Taishō democracy and compromise with it -- Iaku jōsō - Did the Imperial Defence Policy without cabinet recognition have no influence? -- Positive policy and rearmament -- The Katsura-Saionji system - the Katsura bureaucratic clique plus the army versus the Saionji Seiyūkai plus the navy -- The emergence of urban commerce and industry -- The pluralization of conflicts of interest -- Progress of the democratization movement -- Chapter 7: From the Taishō Political Change to the Siemens Affair: Stagnation of 'Empire' and Surge of 'Constitution' -- Twin deficits -- Why was public opinion lenient towards the navy, but severe towards the army? -- Concentrated fire in favour of military rearmament -- The Taishō Political Crisis -- From the army to the navy -- The 'positive policies' of the Yamamoto Gonbei government -- The Siemens Affair -- The revenge of the House of Peers -- The collapse of both the navy cabinet and the Seiyūkai Chapter 8: The twenty-one demands to China: 'Constitution' domestically, 'Empire' externally -- The rise of Yoshino Sakuzō -- The argument about introducing universal suffrage -- Key points of 'Constitution' -- From 'Constitution' to 'Empire' -- The First World War and the twenty-one demands to China -- Disdain for China, disdain for America -- A strange political party - split between peace and democracy -- Part 3: The End of 'Constitution' and 'Empire' -- Introduction: Japan between the two wars -- Chapter 9: What happened between the two world wars? -- A new world order -- The great conversion of the Seiyūkai -- The failure of Shidehara diplomacy - the Manchurian Incident -- The formal recognition of Manchukuo -- The London Naval Disarmament Treaty -- Failure of the policy of not allowing the affair to spread -- The 5-15 Incident and the death of party cabinets -- The influence of the 2-26 Incident -- The abortive Ugaki Kazushige Cabinet -- The Marco Polo Bridge Incident and despatch of three Japanese divisions -- Full-scale war without a war declaration -- Chapter 10: Three episodes between the two world wars -- First period: 'Constitution' and 'non-Empire' under the Hara Kei Cabinet -- A fundamental shift in China policy -- The argument that the General Staff Office should be abolished -- Second period: Counterattack in favour of 'Empire' under the cabinet of Tanaka Giichi -- The plan to take over Manchuria and Mongolia -- Third period: The clash between 'Constitution' and 'Empire' over the Manchurian Incident -- Control of the Kantōgun at one point succeeded -- An unfortunate chain of small mistakes -- Stimson's failure -- Breakdown of the non-expansion policy -- Extinction of 'epochs' -- The upsurge of the Shakai Taishūtō (Social Masses Party) -- How can democracy stop war? -- Conclusion: Irresponsible 'Empire' without 'Constitution' Points and lines -- A lengthy war of attrition - why did a peace settlement prove impossible? -- The Japanese people became a different people -- Peace settlement opinion -- Anti-Japanese sentiment -- The growing strength of the Chinese Communist Party -- I am now nostalgic about the old days I used to hate so much -- There should be no war between Japan and China -- Notes -- Introduction -- Chapter 1 -- Chapter 2 -- Chapter 3 -- Chapter 4 -- Introduction to Part 2 -- Chapter 5 -- Chapter 6 -- Chapter 7 -- Chapter 8 -- Chapter 9 -- Chapter 10 -- Conclusion -- Index |
ctrlnum | (ZDB-30-PQE)EBC6550924 (ZDB-30-PAD)EBC6550924 (ZDB-89-EBL)EBL6550924 (OCoLC)1227836699 (DE-599)BVBBV047698360 |
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dewey-hundreds | 300 - Social sciences |
dewey-ones | 342 - Constitutional and administrative law |
dewey-raw | 342.52029 |
dewey-search | 342.52029 |
dewey-sort | 3342.52029 |
dewey-tens | 340 - Law |
discipline | Rechtswissenschaft Geschichte |
discipline_str_mv | Rechtswissenschaft Geschichte |
edition | First edition |
format | Electronic eBook |
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id | DE-604.BV047698360 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-03T18:58:07Z |
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institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781350136229 9781350136236 9781350136243 |
language | English |
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series2 | SOAS Studies in Modern and Contemporary Japan Ser |
spelling | Banno, Junji 1937-2020 Verfasser (DE-588)14089439X aut Teikoku to rikken (Nitchū sensō wa naze fusegenakatta noka) Empire and Constitution in Modern Japan Why Could War with China Not Be Prevented? Junji Banno ; translated by Arthur Stockwin First edition London ; New York ; Oxford ; New Delhi ; Sydney Bloomsbury Publishing Plc 2021 ©2021 1 Online-Ressource (175 Seiten) txt rdacontent c rdamedia cr rdacarrier SOAS Studies in Modern and Contemporary Japan Ser Intro -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Introduction -- Part 1: The beginnings of 'Empire' and 'Constitution' -- Chapter 1: Defeating China - towards a 'small empire' -- Split in the new Meiji government -- The Japan-China confrontation over Ryūkyū - the Taiwan expedition -- Ōkubo Toshimichi's peace negotiations -- Chapter 2: Demanding a constitutional system of government -- The Ōsaka Conference -- The Imperial Edict establishing a constitutional structure -- The Edict establishing a Parliament: Ending of the constitution-building period -- From the Kanghwado Incident to the Popular Rights Movement -- Miscalculation by Inoue Kaoru -- Fukuzawa Yukichi and Inoue Kaoru -- Alienation - postponing the establishment of a Parliament -- Chapter 3: The Imo (Jingo) and Kapsin (Kōshin) Incidents - 'Empire' once again -- The China threat argument and the return of the 'strong army' argument -- Changing relationship between Japan and Korea, and advent of confrontation between Japan and China -- The subtle 'Asianism' of Fukuzawa Yukichi: Underestimation of China -- China becoming a 'strong power' - the Imo [Korean] or Jingo [Japanese] Incident -- Towards naval rearmament -- Breakdown in the reform of Korea - the Kapsin [Korean] or Kōshin [Japanese] Incident -- If war breaks out, is victory assured? -- Avoidance of war by Itō Hirobumi - the Tianjin Treaty -- Chapter 4: The Sino-Japanese War: The birth of 'Empire' and the continuation of 'Constitution' -- Towards military expansion before launching the Diet -- Dispute between the House of Representatives and the government - stagnation of military expansion -- The Imperial Edict on Harmony and Cooperation -- Europeanization and nationalism -- Towards the Sino-Japanese War -- Opposition from the Meiji Emperor -- The conclusion of the war -- The Japan-China Treaty and the triple intervention Part 2: The division between 'Empire' and 'Constitution' -- Introduction: The system of apportionment between peace and democracy -- Chapter 5: Strong army and war weariness: 'Empire' and 'Constitution' before the Russo-Japanese War -- 'Constitution' did not aspire to 'Empire' -- Neither the government nor the people wanted to fight a war with Russia -- Expansion of the army and navy following the Sino-Japanese War -- Why did the navy speed up its rearmament? -- Chapter 6: From the Russo-Japanese War to the First World War: Struggle between 'Empire' and 'Constitution' -- Going to war with powerful Russia -- Korea becoming a protectorate, and the partition of Manchuria -- The Imperial Defence Policy -- Where were the real potential enemies? -- The 1923 crisis -- Naval stratagems -- We shall not make 'War' but we shall pursue 'Rearmament' -- Resistance to Taishō democracy and compromise with it -- Iaku jōsō - Did the Imperial Defence Policy without cabinet recognition have no influence? -- Positive policy and rearmament -- The Katsura-Saionji system - the Katsura bureaucratic clique plus the army versus the Saionji Seiyūkai plus the navy -- The emergence of urban commerce and industry -- The pluralization of conflicts of interest -- Progress of the democratization movement -- Chapter 7: From the Taishō Political Change to the Siemens Affair: Stagnation of 'Empire' and Surge of 'Constitution' -- Twin deficits -- Why was public opinion lenient towards the navy, but severe towards the army? -- Concentrated fire in favour of military rearmament -- The Taishō Political Crisis -- From the army to the navy -- The 'positive policies' of the Yamamoto Gonbei government -- The Siemens Affair -- The revenge of the House of Peers -- The collapse of both the navy cabinet and the Seiyūkai Chapter 8: The twenty-one demands to China: 'Constitution' domestically, 'Empire' externally -- The rise of Yoshino Sakuzō -- The argument about introducing universal suffrage -- Key points of 'Constitution' -- From 'Constitution' to 'Empire' -- The First World War and the twenty-one demands to China -- Disdain for China, disdain for America -- A strange political party - split between peace and democracy -- Part 3: The End of 'Constitution' and 'Empire' -- Introduction: Japan between the two wars -- Chapter 9: What happened between the two world wars? -- A new world order -- The great conversion of the Seiyūkai -- The failure of Shidehara diplomacy - the Manchurian Incident -- The formal recognition of Manchukuo -- The London Naval Disarmament Treaty -- Failure of the policy of not allowing the affair to spread -- The 5-15 Incident and the death of party cabinets -- The influence of the 2-26 Incident -- The abortive Ugaki Kazushige Cabinet -- The Marco Polo Bridge Incident and despatch of three Japanese divisions -- Full-scale war without a war declaration -- Chapter 10: Three episodes between the two world wars -- First period: 'Constitution' and 'non-Empire' under the Hara Kei Cabinet -- A fundamental shift in China policy -- The argument that the General Staff Office should be abolished -- Second period: Counterattack in favour of 'Empire' under the cabinet of Tanaka Giichi -- The plan to take over Manchuria and Mongolia -- Third period: The clash between 'Constitution' and 'Empire' over the Manchurian Incident -- Control of the Kantōgun at one point succeeded -- An unfortunate chain of small mistakes -- Stimson's failure -- Breakdown of the non-expansion policy -- Extinction of 'epochs' -- The upsurge of the Shakai Taishūtō (Social Masses Party) -- How can democracy stop war? -- Conclusion: Irresponsible 'Empire' without 'Constitution' Points and lines -- A lengthy war of attrition - why did a peace settlement prove impossible? -- The Japanese people became a different people -- Peace settlement opinion -- Anti-Japanese sentiment -- The growing strength of the Chinese Communist Party -- I am now nostalgic about the old days I used to hate so much -- There should be no war between Japan and China -- Notes -- Introduction -- Chapter 1 -- Chapter 2 -- Chapter 3 -- Chapter 4 -- Introduction to Part 2 -- Chapter 5 -- Chapter 6 -- Chapter 7 -- Chapter 8 -- Chapter 9 -- Chapter 10 -- Conclusion -- Index Stockwin, J. Arthur 1937- Sonstige (DE-588)112550320 oth Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe, Hardcover Banno, Junji Empire and Constitution in Modern Japan 9781350136212 London : Bloomsbury Publishing Plc,c2021 |
spellingShingle | Banno, Junji 1937-2020 Empire and Constitution in Modern Japan Why Could War with China Not Be Prevented? Intro -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Introduction -- Part 1: The beginnings of 'Empire' and 'Constitution' -- Chapter 1: Defeating China - towards a 'small empire' -- Split in the new Meiji government -- The Japan-China confrontation over Ryūkyū - the Taiwan expedition -- Ōkubo Toshimichi's peace negotiations -- Chapter 2: Demanding a constitutional system of government -- The Ōsaka Conference -- The Imperial Edict establishing a constitutional structure -- The Edict establishing a Parliament: Ending of the constitution-building period -- From the Kanghwado Incident to the Popular Rights Movement -- Miscalculation by Inoue Kaoru -- Fukuzawa Yukichi and Inoue Kaoru -- Alienation - postponing the establishment of a Parliament -- Chapter 3: The Imo (Jingo) and Kapsin (Kōshin) Incidents - 'Empire' once again -- The China threat argument and the return of the 'strong army' argument -- Changing relationship between Japan and Korea, and advent of confrontation between Japan and China -- The subtle 'Asianism' of Fukuzawa Yukichi: Underestimation of China -- China becoming a 'strong power' - the Imo [Korean] or Jingo [Japanese] Incident -- Towards naval rearmament -- Breakdown in the reform of Korea - the Kapsin [Korean] or Kōshin [Japanese] Incident -- If war breaks out, is victory assured? -- Avoidance of war by Itō Hirobumi - the Tianjin Treaty -- Chapter 4: The Sino-Japanese War: The birth of 'Empire' and the continuation of 'Constitution' -- Towards military expansion before launching the Diet -- Dispute between the House of Representatives and the government - stagnation of military expansion -- The Imperial Edict on Harmony and Cooperation -- Europeanization and nationalism -- Towards the Sino-Japanese War -- Opposition from the Meiji Emperor -- The conclusion of the war -- The Japan-China Treaty and the triple intervention Part 2: The division between 'Empire' and 'Constitution' -- Introduction: The system of apportionment between peace and democracy -- Chapter 5: Strong army and war weariness: 'Empire' and 'Constitution' before the Russo-Japanese War -- 'Constitution' did not aspire to 'Empire' -- Neither the government nor the people wanted to fight a war with Russia -- Expansion of the army and navy following the Sino-Japanese War -- Why did the navy speed up its rearmament? -- Chapter 6: From the Russo-Japanese War to the First World War: Struggle between 'Empire' and 'Constitution' -- Going to war with powerful Russia -- Korea becoming a protectorate, and the partition of Manchuria -- The Imperial Defence Policy -- Where were the real potential enemies? -- The 1923 crisis -- Naval stratagems -- We shall not make 'War' but we shall pursue 'Rearmament' -- Resistance to Taishō democracy and compromise with it -- Iaku jōsō - Did the Imperial Defence Policy without cabinet recognition have no influence? -- Positive policy and rearmament -- The Katsura-Saionji system - the Katsura bureaucratic clique plus the army versus the Saionji Seiyūkai plus the navy -- The emergence of urban commerce and industry -- The pluralization of conflicts of interest -- Progress of the democratization movement -- Chapter 7: From the Taishō Political Change to the Siemens Affair: Stagnation of 'Empire' and Surge of 'Constitution' -- Twin deficits -- Why was public opinion lenient towards the navy, but severe towards the army? -- Concentrated fire in favour of military rearmament -- The Taishō Political Crisis -- From the army to the navy -- The 'positive policies' of the Yamamoto Gonbei government -- The Siemens Affair -- The revenge of the House of Peers -- The collapse of both the navy cabinet and the Seiyūkai Chapter 8: The twenty-one demands to China: 'Constitution' domestically, 'Empire' externally -- The rise of Yoshino Sakuzō -- The argument about introducing universal suffrage -- Key points of 'Constitution' -- From 'Constitution' to 'Empire' -- The First World War and the twenty-one demands to China -- Disdain for China, disdain for America -- A strange political party - split between peace and democracy -- Part 3: The End of 'Constitution' and 'Empire' -- Introduction: Japan between the two wars -- Chapter 9: What happened between the two world wars? -- A new world order -- The great conversion of the Seiyūkai -- The failure of Shidehara diplomacy - the Manchurian Incident -- The formal recognition of Manchukuo -- The London Naval Disarmament Treaty -- Failure of the policy of not allowing the affair to spread -- The 5-15 Incident and the death of party cabinets -- The influence of the 2-26 Incident -- The abortive Ugaki Kazushige Cabinet -- The Marco Polo Bridge Incident and despatch of three Japanese divisions -- Full-scale war without a war declaration -- Chapter 10: Three episodes between the two world wars -- First period: 'Constitution' and 'non-Empire' under the Hara Kei Cabinet -- A fundamental shift in China policy -- The argument that the General Staff Office should be abolished -- Second period: Counterattack in favour of 'Empire' under the cabinet of Tanaka Giichi -- The plan to take over Manchuria and Mongolia -- Third period: The clash between 'Constitution' and 'Empire' over the Manchurian Incident -- Control of the Kantōgun at one point succeeded -- An unfortunate chain of small mistakes -- Stimson's failure -- Breakdown of the non-expansion policy -- Extinction of 'epochs' -- The upsurge of the Shakai Taishūtō (Social Masses Party) -- How can democracy stop war? -- Conclusion: Irresponsible 'Empire' without 'Constitution' Points and lines -- A lengthy war of attrition - why did a peace settlement prove impossible? -- The Japanese people became a different people -- Peace settlement opinion -- Anti-Japanese sentiment -- The growing strength of the Chinese Communist Party -- I am now nostalgic about the old days I used to hate so much -- There should be no war between Japan and China -- Notes -- Introduction -- Chapter 1 -- Chapter 2 -- Chapter 3 -- Chapter 4 -- Introduction to Part 2 -- Chapter 5 -- Chapter 6 -- Chapter 7 -- Chapter 8 -- Chapter 9 -- Chapter 10 -- Conclusion -- Index |
title | Empire and Constitution in Modern Japan Why Could War with China Not Be Prevented? |
title_alt | Teikoku to rikken (Nitchū sensō wa naze fusegenakatta noka) |
title_auth | Empire and Constitution in Modern Japan Why Could War with China Not Be Prevented? |
title_exact_search | Empire and Constitution in Modern Japan Why Could War with China Not Be Prevented? |
title_exact_search_txtP | Empire and Constitution in Modern Japan Why Could War with China Not Be Prevented? |
title_full | Empire and Constitution in Modern Japan Why Could War with China Not Be Prevented? Junji Banno ; translated by Arthur Stockwin |
title_fullStr | Empire and Constitution in Modern Japan Why Could War with China Not Be Prevented? Junji Banno ; translated by Arthur Stockwin |
title_full_unstemmed | Empire and Constitution in Modern Japan Why Could War with China Not Be Prevented? Junji Banno ; translated by Arthur Stockwin |
title_short | Empire and Constitution in Modern Japan |
title_sort | empire and constitution in modern japan why could war with china not be prevented |
title_sub | Why Could War with China Not Be Prevented? |
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