|

|
|
|
|
|
Resources |
|
|
|
Going Home to Japan
| Article
# : |
14377 |
|
|
Section : |
BOOK WORLD
|
| Issue
Date : |
6 / 1988 |
2,393 Words |
| Author
: |
Nobuo K. Shimahara Nabuo K. Shinmahara is professor of the anthropology of
education and associate dean of the Graduate School of
Education at Rutgers University. His publications include
Oppressed Japanese: Bura Kaumin and Adaptation and Education
in Japan. |
THE JAPANESE OVERSEAS:
Can They Go Home Again?
Merry White
New York: Free Press, 1988
174 pp., $19.95
Never before have Americans been so curious about Japanese industry and education. Especially in the last decade, that curiosity has blossomed into full-blown fascination as Japan's influence on international trade has assumed formidable proportions. Japan's economy has continued to demonstrate resiliency and adaptability in the face of a soaring increase in the yen's value since 1985 and the crash of the New York Stock Exchange last October. Today, Japan's stock market makes up 42 percent of the capitalization of world markets. When Japan makes waves, the ripples reach well into the American interior.
The appeal of Japanese education for Americans can be traced to 1979, when Ezra Vogel defined the link between schooling and the competitiveness of Japanese industry in Japan as Number One: Lessons for America. Since American interest in Japanese education is in large part dictated by American perceptions of Japan's industrial success, Vogel's book opened the floodgate to a surge of publications--books, journal and magazine articles, and newspaper accounts--focused on Japanese education in the 1980s.
Merry White's latest book, The Japanese Overseas, is an attempt to address one of the hidden paradoxes resulting from Japan's expanding multinational economy. A timely publication on an important topic, it examines Japanese education and social structure
... (1999 of 15671 Characters)
Read Full Article
|
|