ABSTRACT

In this groundbreaking volume, one of Japan's most insightful contemporary labor analysts assesses the ?light and shadow? of Japanese-style management, explaining why Japanese employees have stood apart from workers in other industrialized countries. Kumazawa brings to life the intense combination of competition and community within Japanese workplaces. He highlights dilemmas facing Japanese labor on the shop floor and in the labor movement. His discussion ranges from the role of women to issues of quality control and self-management. Highly critical of the hierarchical and undemocratic nature of Japanese industry, he offers a sympathetic view from the inside of the difficulties of surviving in the workplaces of contemporary Japan.

chapter 1|16 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|28 pages

The “Take-Off” of Japanese Workers

chapter 6|34 pages

A Postwar History of the Workplace

Management and Unions in the Steel Industry

chapter 7|45 pages

A Postwar History of Women Workers

chapter 8|43 pages

Twenty Years of a Bank Worker’s Life

chapter 9|6 pages

Working Like Mad to Stay in Place

Reflections on Japanese Salary-men Today