Maps, Tables, and Figures Preface Introduction: Enduring Imprints of the Longer Past PART 1. CRISIS OF THE TOKUGAWA REGIME 1. The Tokugawa Polity Unification The Tokugawa Political Settlements The Daimyo The Imperial Institution The Samurai Villagers and City-Dwellers The Margins of the Japanese and Japan 2. Social and Economic Transformations The Seventeenth-Century Boom Riddles of Stagnation and Vitality 3. The Intellectual World of Late Tokugawa Ideological Foundations of the Tokugawa Regime Cultural Diversity and Contradictions Reform, Critiques, and Insurgent Ideas 4. The Overthrow of the Tokugawa The Western Powers and the Unequal Treaties The Crumbling of Tokugawa Rule Politics of Terror and Accommodation Bakufu Revival, the Satsuma-Choshu Insurgency, and Domestic Unrest PART 2. MODERN REVOLUTION, 1868-1905 5. The Samurai Revolution Programs of Nationalist Revolution Political Unification and Central Bureaucracy Eliminating the Status System The Conscript Army Compulsory Education The Monarch at the Center Building a Rich Country Stances toward the World 6.
Participation and Protest Political Discourse and Contention Movement for Freedom and People''s Rights Samurai Rebellions, Peasant Uprisings, and New Religions Participation for Women Treaty Revision and Domestic Politics The Meiji Constitution 7. Social, Economic, Environmental, and Cultural Transformations Landlords and Tenants Industrial Revolution The Workforce and Labor Conditions Spread of Mass and Higher Education Culture and Religion Affirming Japanese Identity and Destiny 8. Empire and Domestic Order The Trajectory to Empire Contexts of Empire, Capitalism, and Nation-Building The Turbulent World of Diet Politics The Era of Popular Protest Engineering Nationalism PART 3. IMPERIAL JAPAN FROM ASCENDANCE TO ASHES 9. Economy and Society Wartime Boom and Postwar Bust Landlords, Tenants, and Rural Life City Life: Middle and Working Classes Cultural Responses to Social Change 10. Democracy and Empire between the World Wars The Emergence of Party Cabinets The Structure of Parliamentary Government Ideological Challenges Strategies of Imperial Democratic Rule Japan, Asia, and the Western Powers 11. The Depression Crisis and Responses Economic and Social Crisis Breaking the Impasse: New Departures Abroad Toward a New Social and Economic Order Toward a New Political Order 12. Japan in Wartime Wider War in China Toward Pearl Harbor The Pacific War Mobilizing the Nation for War Living in the Shadow of War Ending the War Burdens and Legacies of War 13.
Occupied Japan: New Departures and Durable Structures Bearing the Unbearable The American Agenda: Demilitarize and Democratize Japanese Responses The Reverse Course Toward Recovery and Independence: Another Unequal Treaty? PART 4. POSTWAR AND CONTEMPORARY JAPAN, 1952-2012 14. Economic and Social Transformations The Postwar "Economic Miracle" Transwar Patterns of Community, Family, School, and Work Shared Experiences and Standardized Lifeways of the Postwar Era Differences Enduring and Realigned Managing Social Stability and Change Images and Ideologies of Social Stability and Change 15. Political Struggles and Settlements of the High-Growth Era Political Struggles The Politics of Accommodation Global Connections: Oil Crisis and the End of High Growth 16. Global Power in a Polarized World: Japan in the 1980s New Roles in the World and New Tensions Economy: Thriving through the Oil Crises Politics: The Conservative Heyday Society and Culture in the Exuberant Eighties 17. Japan''s "Lost Decades": 1990s-2000s The End of Showa The Specter of a Divided Society Economy of the first "Lost Decade" The Fall and Rise of the Liberal Democratic Party Assessing Reforms, Explaining Recovery Between Asia and the West 18. Shock, Disaster, and the End of the Hesei Era: Beyond the ''Lost Decades''? The Lehman Shock Politics of Hope and Disillusionment Making Sense of the Perception of Decline The Disasters of "3.11" and their Aftermath Appendix: Prime Ministers of Japan, 1885-2012 Notes Select Bibliography Index.