ABSTRACT

"...The Japanese are not so black as they are painted or so immaculate as they occasionally paint themselves." As the author’s own words suggest, this book attempts to give a balanced account of Japan during the "crisis" years of 1931-1935 which were some of the most significant in modern Japanese history. They saw an act of political expansion unique in the years following World War One, as well as an expansion of Japanese foreign trade in markets hitherto dominated by the exports of other countries. The letters re-issued here were written for both the Western and Japanese reader and as such represent an unrivalled impartial resource.

 

part I|2 pages

WAR BEHIND THE TIMES

chapter II|4 pages

SHINTO VERSUS RELIGION

chapter III|4 pages

THE POPULATION PROBLEM

chapter IV|5 pages

ALPHABET OR CHARACTERS

part V|2 pages

TOKYO VERSUS GENEVA

chapter VI|6 pages

“SUZUKI” AND HIS VIEWS

chapter VII|5 pages

ASIATIC FEDERATION

chapter VIII|8 pages

THE ECONOMICS OF CRISIS

chapter IX|4 pages

EMPIRES AND EMPIRES

chapter X|8 pages

THE FOREIGNER IN JAPAN

chapter XI|11 pages

ANGLO-JAPANESE RELATIONS

chapter XII|4 pages

SOME JAPANESE

chapter XIII|6 pages

RECENT JAPAN BOOKS

chapter XIV|5 pages

COMPARATIVE LIVING STANDARDS

chapter XV|7 pages

THE RISE OF CAMP GOVERNMENT

chapter XVI|11 pages

LOOKING BACKWARD AND FORWARD