ABSTRACT

In 1945 Japan had to adjust very rapidly to sudden defeat, to the arrival of the American Occupation and to the encounter with the English language, together with a different outlook on many aspects of society and government. This scholarly book is based on in-depth interviews with people, now aged, who were school students at the time of the Occupation and who experienced first-hand this immense cultural change. The book considers the nature of the changing outlook, including democratization, the new role for the Japanese Emperor and all this represented for the place of tradition in Japanese life and the growing emphasis on individualism away from collectivism. It discusses the changing system of education itself, including new structures and new textbooks, and relates the feelings of the participants as they came to terms with defeat and the language and culture of the former enemy. Overall, the book provides a fascinating insight into a key period of Japanese history.

part I|30 pages

Context

chapter 1|8 pages

The scope of this book

chapter 2|20 pages

Setting the scene

part II|134 pages

Historical background

chapter 4|58 pages

Exploring the historical literature (1)

chapter 5|54 pages

Exploring the historical literature (2)

chapter 6|12 pages

Data sources, collection and analysis

part III|79 pages

Interviews and their implications

chapter 7|68 pages

The interviews

What we learned

chapter 8|9 pages

Concluding thoughts