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Japan's Political Underdevelopment


Article # : 15230 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 8 / 1989  2,876 Words
Author : Lewis Austin
Lewis Austin is research analyst for the Beacon Hill Multicultural Psychological Association. He is the author of Japan: The Paradox of Progress and Saints and Samurai: The Politics and Culture of the Japanese and American Elite. He has worked in Japan as a banker and a social scientist, and has taught at Yale and the University of California.

       THE ENIGMA OF JAPANESE POWER
       People and Politics in a Stateless Nation
       Karel van Wolferen
       New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1989
       496 pp., $24.95
       
        Japan has struggled with the modern world all through the bloody night of the last century, and like Jacob with the angel it clutches its antagonist in a ferocious grip. "I will not let you go unless you bless me," cried Jacob, and the Japanese also await with a sense of increasing urgency some blessing, some accolade, some recognition from the outer world--the alien and unbearably attractive West. But the rest of the world, lacking angelic insight, cannot bestow the recognition that the Japanese long for, and in consequence, their conduct in this struggle has been more often a matter of fools rushing in than of angelic reluctance to tread too heavily. And after all, what conceivable consummation will satisfy the yearning of the dogged warrior-businessmen for their proper place?
       
        It is Karel van Wolferen's impressive achievement, after twenty-five years of life and work in Japan, to have formulated the question that the tragic and inspiring history of Japan over the last century proposes to us, and with impressive restraint, he refrains from easy answers.
       
        The "enigma" of his title centers in this: In the ashes and humiliation of the shattering defeat of 1945 the Japanese hammered out a long-term strategy for survival, first out of necessity, thereafter with increasing sophistication and subtlety, elaborating it through ... (1999 of 16974 Characters)
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