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Postwar Japan

Postwar Japan is the period in Japanese history beginning with the surrender of Japan to the Allies of World War II on 2 September 1945, and lasting at least until the end of the Shōwa era in 1989.

Despite the massive devastation it suffered in the Second World War, Japan established itself as a global economic power at peace with the world after the Allied-occupation ended on 28 April 1952 by the Treaty of San Francisco. In terms of political power it was more reluctant, especially in the nonuse of military force. The post-war constitution of 1947 included Article 9, which restricted Japan from having a military force and engaging in war. However, it has operated military forces in the stationing of the United States Forces Japan based on the U.S.-Japan Security Treaty after the Allied occupation and the form of the Japanese Self-Defense Forces since 1954.

Over the years, the meaning of Article 9 has been interpreted differently, because the United States now encourages Japan to control its own security and to join their military strategy more. The Liberal Democratic Party would like to see the Constitution and Article 9 amended.[1]

Politics edit

The Allied occupation ended on 28 April 1952, when the terms of the Treaty of San Francisco went into effect. By the terms of the treaty, Japan regained its sovereignty, but lost many of its possessions from before World War II, including Korea (by 1948, divided into the Republic of Korea (South Korea) and the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (North Korea), Taiwan (the Kuomintang led by Chiang Kai-shek, retreated to the island after losing control over mainland China to Mao's CCP in the Chinese Civil War, leading to the establishment of the People's Republic of China) and Sakhalin (regained by the Soviet Union and now under Russian jurisdiction). It also lost control over a number of small islands in the Pacific which it administered as League of Nations Mandates, such as the Marianas and the Marshalls. The new treaty also gave Japan the freedom to engage in international defence blocs. Japan did this on the same day it signed the San Francisco Treaty: The U.S. insisted, and Prime Minister Shigeru Yoshida agreed, to a treaty that allowed the American military to continue their use of bases in Japan.

Even before Japan regained full sovereignty, the government had rehabilitated nearly 80,000 people who had been purged, many of whom returned to their former political and government positions. A debate over limitations on military spending and the sovereignty of the emperor ensued, contributing to the great reduction in the Liberal Party's majority in the first post-occupation elections (October 1952). After several reorganizations of the armed forces, in 1954 the Self-Defense Forces were established under a civilian director. Cold War realities and the hot war in nearby Korea also contributed significantly to the United States-influenced economic redevelopment, the containment of the Soviet Union and Communist China, and the support for organized labor in Japan.[2]

Continual fragmentation of parties and a succession of minority governments led conservative forces to merge the Liberal Party (Jiyuto) with the Japan Democratic Party (Nihon Minshuto), an offshoot of the earlier Democratic Party, to form the Liberal Democratic Party (Jiyu-Minshuto; LDP) in November 1955. This party continuously held power from 1955 through 1993, when it was replaced by a new minority government. LDP leadership was drawn from the elite who had seen Japan through the defeat and occupation; it attracted former bureaucrats, local politicians, businessmen, journalists, other professionals, farmers, and university graduates. In October 1955, socialist groups reunited under the Japan Socialist Party, which emerged as the second most powerful political force. It was followed closely in popularity by the Kōmeitō, founded in 1964 as the political arm of the Soka Gakkai (Value Creation Society), a lay former organization of the Buddhist sect Nichiren Shoshu. The Komeito emphasized traditional Japanese beliefs and attracted urban laborers, former rural residents, and many women. Like the Japan Socialist Party, it favoured the gradual modification and dissolution of the Japan-United States Mutual Security Assistance Pact.

 
The revision of the U.S.-Japan Security Treaty in 1960 generated mass public opposition and protest.

By the late 1970s, the Komeito and the Democratic Socialist Party had come to accept the Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security, and the Democratic Socialist Party even came to support a small defense buildup. The Japan Socialist Party, too, was forced to abandon its once strict antimilitary stance. The United States kept up pressure on Japan to increase its defense spending above 1% of its GNP, engendering much debate in the Diet, with most opposition coming not from minority parties or public opinion but from budget-conscious officials in the Ministry of Finance.

Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka was forced to resign in 1974 because of his alleged connection to financial scandals and, in the face of charges of involvement in the Lockheed bribery scandal, he was arrested and jailed briefly in 1976.[3]

The fractious politics of the LDP hindered consensus in the Diet in the late 1970s. The sudden death of Prime Minister Masayoshi Ohira just before the June 1980 elections, however, brought out a sympathy vote for the party and gave the new prime minister, Zenko Suzuki, a working majority. Suzuki was soon swept up in a controversy over the publication of a textbook that appeared to many as a whitewash of Japanese aggression in World War II. This incident, and serious fiscal problems, caused the Suzuki cabinet, composed of numerous LDP factions, to fall.

Yasuhiro Nakasone, a conservative backed by the still-powerful Tanaka and Suzuki factions who once served as director general of the Defense Agency, became prime minister in November 1982. In November 1984, Nakasone was chosen for a second term as LDP president. His cabinet received an unusually high rating, a 50% favorable response in polling during his first term, while opposition parties reached a new low in popular support. As he moved into his second term, Nakasone thus held a strong position in the Diet and the nation.[4]

Despite being found guilty of bribery in 1983, Tanaka in the early-to-mid-1980s remained a power behind the scenes through his control of the party's informal apparatus, and he continued as an influential adviser to the more internationally minded Nakasone. The end of Nakasone's tenure as prime minister in October 1987 (his second two-year term had been extended for one year) was a momentous point in modern Japanese history. Just fifteen months before Nakasone's retirement, the LDP unexpectedly had won its largest majority ever in the House of Representatives by securing 304 out of the 512 seats. The government was faced with growing crises. Land prices were rapidly increasing due to the Japanese asset price bubble, inflation increased at the highest rate since 1975, unemployment reached a record high at 3.2%, bankruptcies were rife, and there was political rancor over LDP-proposed tax reform. In the summer of 1987, economic indicators showed signs of recovery, but on October 20, 1987, the same day Nakasone officially named his successor, Noboru Takeshita, the Tokyo Stock Market crashed. Japan's economy and its political system had reached a watershed in their postwar development that would continue to play out into the 1990s.

Economy edit

 
Industrial district in Fukuoka, 1970.

The early post-war years were devoted to rebuilding lost industrial capacity: major investments were made in electric power, coal, steel, and chemicals. By the mid-1950s, production matched prewar levels. Released from the demands of military-dominated government, the economy not only recovered its lost momentum but also surpassed the growth rates of earlier periods. Between 1953 and 1965, GDP expanded by more than 9% per year, manufacturing and mining by 13%, construction by 11%, and infrastructure by 12%. In 1965 these sectors employed more than 41% of the labor force, whereas only 26% remained in agriculture.[5]

Japan's highly acclaimed post-war education system contributed strongly to the modernizing process. The world's highest literacy rate and high education standards were major reasons for Japan's success in achieving a technologically advanced economy. Japanese schools also encouraged discipline, another benefit in forming an effective work force.

The mid-1960s ushered in a new type of industrial development as the economy opened itself to international competition in some industries and developed heavy and chemical manufactures. Whereas textiles and light manufactures maintained their profitability internationally, other products, such as automobiles, electronics, ships, and machine tools assumed new importance. The value added to manufacturing and mining grew at the rate of 17% per year between 1965 and 1970. Growth rates moderated to about 8% and evened out between the industrial and service sectors between 1970 and 1973, as retail trade, finance, real estate, information technology, and other service industries streamlined their operations.

The LDP government, through institutions such as Ministry of International Trade and Industry (MITI), encouraged Japanese industrial development overseas while restricting foreign companies' business within the country. These practices, coupled with a reliance on the United States for defense, allowed Japan's economy to increase exponentially during the Cold War. By 1980, many Japanese products, particularly automobiles and electronics, were being exported around the world, and Japan's industrial sector was the second-largest in the world after the U.S. This growth pattern stagnated after 1991.[6]

The 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo marked the re-emergence of Japan in the international arena: Japan's postwar development was showcased through innovations such as the Shinkansen high-speed rail network. In 1968, the first modern office skyscraper called the Kasumigaseki Building was built in Japan. It has 36 floors and is 156 meters high.[7]

The high economic growth and political tranquillity of the mid-to-late 1960s were tempered by the quadrupling of oil prices by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) in 1973. Almost completely dependent on imports for petroleum, Japan experienced its first recession since World War II.

Labor unions had been destroyed by the government by 1940. The American occupation forces, reflecting their New Deal American values, supported a revival. Communist unions were included, although a proposed nationwide general strike was forbidden in 1947.[8] After 1970, union membership declined in both Japan and the United States. According to Wythe Holt, in both countries workers had adopted consumer lifestyle and have gained the education needed to move out of blue collar jobs. Furthermore, there has been frustration with the top-down, bureaucratic management by union leaders who seem to show little interest in the aspirations of the workers.[9]

Foreign relations edit

Despite its central position in the world economy, Japan has played a modest role in global politics for much of the postwar period.[10]

The 1950s were largely marked by Japan re-establishing relations to numerous nations and redefining its international role, e.g., by joining the United Nations in 1956. One such total redefinition were Japan's relations to its former World War II-ally Germany, which were put on a new basis in 1955 focused on trade.

Japan's biggest postwar political crisis took place in 1960 over the revision of the Japan-United States Mutual Security Assistance Pact. As the new Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security was concluded, which renewed the United States role as military protector of Japan, massive street protests and political upheaval occurred, and the cabinet resigned a month after the Diet's ratification of the treaty. Thereafter, political turmoil subsided. Japanese views of the United States, after years of mass protests over nuclear armaments and the mutual defense pact, improved by 1968 and 1972 respectively, with the reversion of United States-occupied Nanpō and Ryukyu Islands to Japanese sovereignty and the winding down of the Vietnam War.

Japan had reestablished relations with the Republic of China after World War II, and cordial relations were maintained with the nationalist government when it was exiled to Taiwan, a policy that won Japan the enmity of the People's Republic of China, which was established in 1949. After the general warming of relations between China and Western countries, especially the United States, which shocked Japan with its sudden rapprochement with Beijing in 1971 (the Ping Pong Diplomacy), Tokyo established relations with Beijing in 1972. Close cooperation in the economic sphere followed.

Japan's relations with the Soviet Union continued to be problematic after the war, but a Joint Declaration between Japan and the USSR, ending the war and reestablishing diplomatic relations was signed October 19, 1956.[11] The main object of dispute was the Soviet occupation of what Japan calls its Northern Territories, the two most southerly islands in the Kurils (Iturup and Kunashiri) and Shikotan and the Habomai Islands (northeast of Hokkaido), which were seized by the Soviet Union shortly after Japan's World War II surrender.

Under the premiership of Kakuei Tanaka (1972–74), Japan took a stronger but still low-key stance by steadily increasing its defense spending and easing trade frictions with the United States. Tanaka's administration was also characterized by high-level talks with United States, Soviet, and Chinese leaders, if with mixed results. His visits to Indonesia and Thailand prompted riots, a manifestation of long-standing anti-Japanese sentiments.

Several cordial visits between Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone and U.S. President Ronald Reagan were aimed at improving relations between their countries. Nakasone's more strident position on Japanese defense issues made him popular with some United States officials but not, generally, in Japan or among Asian neighbors. Although his characterization of Japan as an "unsinkable aircraft carrier", his noting the "common destiny" of Japan and the United States, and his calling for revisions to Article 9 of the Constitution (which renounced war as the sovereign right of the nation), among other prorearmament statements, produced negative reactions at home and abroad, a gradual acceptance emerged of the Self-Defense Forces and the mutual security treaty with the United States in the mid-1980s.

Another issue in relations with the U.S. was Japan's growing trade surplus, which reached record heights during Nakasone's first term. The United States pressured Japan to remedy the imbalance, demanding that Tokyo raise the value of the yen and open its markets further to facilitate more imports from the United States. Because the Japanese government aids and protects its key industries, it was accused of creating an unfair competitive advantage. Tokyo agreed to try to resolve these problems but generally defended its industrial policies and made concessions on trade restrictions very reluctantly.

Culture edit

 
The 1954 film Godzilla became one of Japan's first major pop cultural exports in the postwar era.

Japan continued to experience Westernization in the postwar era, much of which came about during the occupation, when American soldiers were a common sight in many parts of the country. American music and movies became popular, spurring a generation of Japanese artists who built on both Western and Japanese influences.[12]

During this period, Japan also began to emerge as an exporter of culture. Young people across the world began consuming kaiju (monster) movies, anime (animation), manga (comic books), and other modern Japanese culture. Japanese authors such as Yasunari Kawabata and Yukio Mishima became popular literary figures in America and Europe. American soldiers returning from the occupation brought with them stories and artifacts, and the following generations of U.S. troops in Japan contributed to a steady trickle of martial arts and other culture from the country.

Timeline to 1989 edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Andrew Gordon, ed. Postwar Japan as history (Univ of California Press, 1993) online
  2. ^ Michael Schaller, "Securing the Great Crescent: Occupied Japan and the origins of containment in Southeast Asia." Journal of American History 69.2 (1982): 392-414 online
  3. ^ Chalmers Johnson, "Tanaka Kakuei, structural corruption, and the advent of machine politics in Japan." Journal of Japanese Studies 12.1 (1986): 1-28.
  4. ^ Kenneth B. Pyle, "In pursuit of a grand design: Nakasone betwixt the past and the future". Journal of Japanese Studies 13.2 (1987): 243–270. JSTOR 132470
  5. ^ Hane, Eastern Phoenix (2018) pp. 97–124.
  6. ^ Takeo Hoshi, and Anil K. Kashyap. "Will the US and Europe avoid a lost decade? Lessons from Japan’s postcrisis experience." IMF Economic Review 63.1 (2015): 110-163. online
  7. ^ . Japan Times. 1998-04-17. Archived from the original on 2015-03-24.
  8. ^ Hane, Eastern Phoenix (2018) pp. 28, 35.
  9. ^ Wythe Holt, "Union Densities, Business Unionism, and Working-Class Struggle: Labour Movement Decline in the United States and Japan, 1930-2000." Labour/Le Travail 59 (2007): 99-131. online
  10. ^ Bert Edström, Japan’s evolving foreign policy doctrine: from Yoshida to Miyazawa (Springer, 2016).
  11. ^ "Preface". Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan.
  12. ^ see Mikiso Hane, Eastern phoenix: Japan since 1945 (Routledge, 2018) pp 173–202.

Further reading edit

  • Allinson, Gary D. Japan's Postwar History (Cornell University Press, 2004)
  • Cooney, Kevin J. Japan's Foreign Policy Since 1945 (2006)
  • Dower, John W. Embracing Defeat: Japan in the Wake of World War II (W. W. Norton & Company. 1999).
  • Duus, Peter, ed. The Cambridge history of Japan: The Twentieth Century (1989) pp. 154–216 on political history and 494–540 on economic history.
  • Edström, Bert. Japan’s Evolving Foreign Policy Doctrine: from Yoshida to Miyazawa (Springer, 2016).
  • George, Timothy S., and Christopher Gerteis, eds. Japan since 1945: From Postwar to Post-Bubble (Bloomsbury Academic, 2013)
  • Gordon, Andrew, ed. Postwar Japan as History. (Univ of California Press, 1993) online, a major overview of leading topics
  • Hane, Mikiso. Eastern Phoenix: Japan since 1945 (Routledge, 2018) excerpt.
  • Hashimoto, Akiko. The Long Defeat: Cultural Trauma, Memory, and Identity in Japan (Oxford University Press, 2015).
  • Hoover, William D. Historical Dictionary of Postwar Japan (Scarecrow Press, 2018).
  • Kapur, Nick (2018). Japan at the Crossroads: Conflict and Compromise after Anpo. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-6749-8442-4.
  • Makoto Iokibe, Caroline Rose, et al. eds. Japanese Diplomacy in the 1950s: From Isolation to Integration (2008) online
  • Ruoff, Kenneth J. Japan’s Imperial House in the Postwar Era, 1945–2019 (Harvard University Asia Center, 2020)
  • Watanabe, Akio, ed. (2016). The Prime Ministers of Postwar Japan, 1945-1995. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books. ISBN 978-1-4985-1001-1.

External links edit

  • Hirata Tetsuo; John W. Dower. .
Preceded by History of Japan
Postwar Japan

1945–1989
Succeeded by

postwar, japan, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding,. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Postwar Japan news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message The neutrality of this article is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met July 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Learn how and when to remove this message Postwar Japan is the period in Japanese history beginning with the surrender of Japan to the Allies of World War II on 2 September 1945 and lasting at least until the end of the Shōwa era in 1989 Despite the massive devastation it suffered in the Second World War Japan established itself as a global economic power at peace with the world after the Allied occupation ended on 28 April 1952 by the Treaty of San Francisco In terms of political power it was more reluctant especially in the nonuse of military force The post war constitution of 1947 included Article 9 which restricted Japan from having a military force and engaging in war However it has operated military forces in the stationing of the United States Forces Japan based on the U S Japan Security Treaty after the Allied occupation and the form of the Japanese Self Defense Forces since 1954 Over the years the meaning of Article 9 has been interpreted differently because the United States now encourages Japan to control its own security and to join their military strategy more The Liberal Democratic Party would like to see the Constitution and Article 9 amended 1 Contents 1 Politics 2 Economy 3 Foreign relations 4 Culture 5 Timeline to 1989 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksPolitics editThe Allied occupation ended on 28 April 1952 when the terms of the Treaty of San Francisco went into effect By the terms of the treaty Japan regained its sovereignty but lost many of its possessions from before World War II including Korea by 1948 divided into the Republic of Korea South Korea and the Democratic People s Republic of Korea North Korea Taiwan the Kuomintang led by Chiang Kai shek retreated to the island after losing control over mainland China to Mao s CCP in the Chinese Civil War leading to the establishment of the People s Republic of China and Sakhalin regained by the Soviet Union and now under Russian jurisdiction It also lost control over a number of small islands in the Pacific which it administered as League of Nations Mandates such as the Marianas and the Marshalls The new treaty also gave Japan the freedom to engage in international defence blocs Japan did this on the same day it signed the San Francisco Treaty The U S insisted and Prime Minister Shigeru Yoshida agreed to a treaty that allowed the American military to continue their use of bases in Japan Even before Japan regained full sovereignty the government had rehabilitated nearly 80 000 people who had been purged many of whom returned to their former political and government positions A debate over limitations on military spending and the sovereignty of the emperor ensued contributing to the great reduction in the Liberal Party s majority in the first post occupation elections October 1952 After several reorganizations of the armed forces in 1954 the Self Defense Forces were established under a civilian director Cold War realities and the hot war in nearby Korea also contributed significantly to the United States influenced economic redevelopment the containment of the Soviet Union and Communist China and the support for organized labor in Japan 2 Continual fragmentation of parties and a succession of minority governments led conservative forces to merge the Liberal Party Jiyuto with the Japan Democratic Party Nihon Minshuto an offshoot of the earlier Democratic Party to form the Liberal Democratic Party Jiyu Minshuto LDP in November 1955 This party continuously held power from 1955 through 1993 when it was replaced by a new minority government LDP leadership was drawn from the elite who had seen Japan through the defeat and occupation it attracted former bureaucrats local politicians businessmen journalists other professionals farmers and university graduates In October 1955 socialist groups reunited under the Japan Socialist Party which emerged as the second most powerful political force It was followed closely in popularity by the Kōmeitō founded in 1964 as the political arm of the Soka Gakkai Value Creation Society a lay former organization of the Buddhist sect Nichiren Shoshu The Komeito emphasized traditional Japanese beliefs and attracted urban laborers former rural residents and many women Like the Japan Socialist Party it favoured the gradual modification and dissolution of the Japan United States Mutual Security Assistance Pact nbsp The revision of the U S Japan Security Treaty in 1960 generated mass public opposition and protest By the late 1970s the Komeito and the Democratic Socialist Party had come to accept the Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security and the Democratic Socialist Party even came to support a small defense buildup The Japan Socialist Party too was forced to abandon its once strict antimilitary stance The United States kept up pressure on Japan to increase its defense spending above 1 of its GNP engendering much debate in the Diet with most opposition coming not from minority parties or public opinion but from budget conscious officials in the Ministry of Finance Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka was forced to resign in 1974 because of his alleged connection to financial scandals and in the face of charges of involvement in the Lockheed bribery scandal he was arrested and jailed briefly in 1976 3 The fractious politics of the LDP hindered consensus in the Diet in the late 1970s The sudden death of Prime Minister Masayoshi Ohira just before the June 1980 elections however brought out a sympathy vote for the party and gave the new prime minister Zenko Suzuki a working majority Suzuki was soon swept up in a controversy over the publication of a textbook that appeared to many as a whitewash of Japanese aggression in World War II This incident and serious fiscal problems caused the Suzuki cabinet composed of numerous LDP factions to fall Yasuhiro Nakasone a conservative backed by the still powerful Tanaka and Suzuki factions who once served as director general of the Defense Agency became prime minister in November 1982 In November 1984 Nakasone was chosen for a second term as LDP president His cabinet received an unusually high rating a 50 favorable response in polling during his first term while opposition parties reached a new low in popular support As he moved into his second term Nakasone thus held a strong position in the Diet and the nation 4 Despite being found guilty of bribery in 1983 Tanaka in the early to mid 1980s remained a power behind the scenes through his control of the party s informal apparatus and he continued as an influential adviser to the more internationally minded Nakasone The end of Nakasone s tenure as prime minister in October 1987 his second two year term had been extended for one year was a momentous point in modern Japanese history Just fifteen months before Nakasone s retirement the LDP unexpectedly had won its largest majority ever in the House of Representatives by securing 304 out of the 512 seats The government was faced with growing crises Land prices were rapidly increasing due to the Japanese asset price bubble inflation increased at the highest rate since 1975 unemployment reached a record high at 3 2 bankruptcies were rife and there was political rancor over LDP proposed tax reform In the summer of 1987 economic indicators showed signs of recovery but on October 20 1987 the same day Nakasone officially named his successor Noboru Takeshita the Tokyo Stock Market crashed Japan s economy and its political system had reached a watershed in their postwar development that would continue to play out into the 1990s Economy editMain article Economic history of Japan nbsp Industrial district in Fukuoka 1970 The early post war years were devoted to rebuilding lost industrial capacity major investments were made in electric power coal steel and chemicals By the mid 1950s production matched prewar levels Released from the demands of military dominated government the economy not only recovered its lost momentum but also surpassed the growth rates of earlier periods Between 1953 and 1965 GDP expanded by more than 9 per year manufacturing and mining by 13 construction by 11 and infrastructure by 12 In 1965 these sectors employed more than 41 of the labor force whereas only 26 remained in agriculture 5 Japan s highly acclaimed post war education system contributed strongly to the modernizing process The world s highest literacy rate and high education standards were major reasons for Japan s success in achieving a technologically advanced economy Japanese schools also encouraged discipline another benefit in forming an effective work force The mid 1960s ushered in a new type of industrial development as the economy opened itself to international competition in some industries and developed heavy and chemical manufactures Whereas textiles and light manufactures maintained their profitability internationally other products such as automobiles electronics ships and machine tools assumed new importance The value added to manufacturing and mining grew at the rate of 17 per year between 1965 and 1970 Growth rates moderated to about 8 and evened out between the industrial and service sectors between 1970 and 1973 as retail trade finance real estate information technology and other service industries streamlined their operations The LDP government through institutions such as Ministry of International Trade and Industry MITI encouraged Japanese industrial development overseas while restricting foreign companies business within the country These practices coupled with a reliance on the United States for defense allowed Japan s economy to increase exponentially during the Cold War By 1980 many Japanese products particularly automobiles and electronics were being exported around the world and Japan s industrial sector was the second largest in the world after the U S This growth pattern stagnated after 1991 6 The 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo marked the re emergence of Japan in the international arena Japan s postwar development was showcased through innovations such as the Shinkansen high speed rail network In 1968 the first modern office skyscraper called the Kasumigaseki Building was built in Japan It has 36 floors and is 156 meters high 7 The high economic growth and political tranquillity of the mid to late 1960s were tempered by the quadrupling of oil prices by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries OPEC in 1973 Almost completely dependent on imports for petroleum Japan experienced its first recession since World War II Labor unions had been destroyed by the government by 1940 The American occupation forces reflecting their New Deal American values supported a revival Communist unions were included although a proposed nationwide general strike was forbidden in 1947 8 After 1970 union membership declined in both Japan and the United States According to Wythe Holt in both countries workers had adopted consumer lifestyle and have gained the education needed to move out of blue collar jobs Furthermore there has been frustration with the top down bureaucratic management by union leaders who seem to show little interest in the aspirations of the workers 9 Foreign relations editDespite its central position in the world economy Japan has played a modest role in global politics for much of the postwar period 10 The 1950s were largely marked by Japan re establishing relations to numerous nations and redefining its international role e g by joining the United Nations in 1956 One such total redefinition were Japan s relations to its former World War II ally Germany which were put on a new basis in 1955 focused on trade Japan s biggest postwar political crisis took place in 1960 over the revision of the Japan United States Mutual Security Assistance Pact As the new Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security was concluded which renewed the United States role as military protector of Japan massive street protests and political upheaval occurred and the cabinet resigned a month after the Diet s ratification of the treaty Thereafter political turmoil subsided Japanese views of the United States after years of mass protests over nuclear armaments and the mutual defense pact improved by 1968 and 1972 respectively with the reversion of United States occupied Nanpō and Ryukyu Islands to Japanese sovereignty and the winding down of the Vietnam War Japan had reestablished relations with the Republic of China after World War II and cordial relations were maintained with the nationalist government when it was exiled to Taiwan a policy that won Japan the enmity of the People s Republic of China which was established in 1949 After the general warming of relations between China and Western countries especially the United States which shocked Japan with its sudden rapprochement with Beijing in 1971 the Ping Pong Diplomacy Tokyo established relations with Beijing in 1972 Close cooperation in the economic sphere followed Japan s relations with the Soviet Union continued to be problematic after the war but a Joint Declaration between Japan and the USSR ending the war and reestablishing diplomatic relations was signed October 19 1956 11 The main object of dispute was the Soviet occupation of what Japan calls its Northern Territories the two most southerly islands in the Kurils Iturup and Kunashiri and Shikotan and the Habomai Islands northeast of Hokkaido which were seized by the Soviet Union shortly after Japan s World War II surrender Under the premiership of Kakuei Tanaka 1972 74 Japan took a stronger but still low key stance by steadily increasing its defense spending and easing trade frictions with the United States Tanaka s administration was also characterized by high level talks with United States Soviet and Chinese leaders if with mixed results His visits to Indonesia and Thailand prompted riots a manifestation of long standing anti Japanese sentiments Several cordial visits between Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone and U S President Ronald Reagan were aimed at improving relations between their countries Nakasone s more strident position on Japanese defense issues made him popular with some United States officials but not generally in Japan or among Asian neighbors Although his characterization of Japan as an unsinkable aircraft carrier his noting the common destiny of Japan and the United States and his calling for revisions to Article 9 of the Constitution which renounced war as the sovereign right of the nation among other prorearmament statements produced negative reactions at home and abroad a gradual acceptance emerged of the Self Defense Forces and the mutual security treaty with the United States in the mid 1980s Another issue in relations with the U S was Japan s growing trade surplus which reached record heights during Nakasone s first term The United States pressured Japan to remedy the imbalance demanding that Tokyo raise the value of the yen and open its markets further to facilitate more imports from the United States Because the Japanese government aids and protects its key industries it was accused of creating an unfair competitive advantage Tokyo agreed to try to resolve these problems but generally defended its industrial policies and made concessions on trade restrictions very reluctantly Culture edit nbsp The 1954 film Godzilla became one of Japan s first major pop cultural exports in the postwar era Japan continued to experience Westernization in the postwar era much of which came about during the occupation when American soldiers were a common sight in many parts of the country American music and movies became popular spurring a generation of Japanese artists who built on both Western and Japanese influences 12 During this period Japan also began to emerge as an exporter of culture Young people across the world began consuming kaiju monster movies anime animation manga comic books and other modern Japanese culture Japanese authors such as Yasunari Kawabata and Yukio Mishima became popular literary figures in America and Europe American soldiers returning from the occupation brought with them stories and artifacts and the following generations of U S troops in Japan contributed to a steady trickle of martial arts and other culture from the country Timeline to 1989 edit1945 Surrender of Japan to the Allies and Allied occupation starts September 2 1946 Emperor Hirohito renounces his own divinity January 1 1947 Enforcement of the constitutional amendment May 3 1948 1951 Red Purge 1949 Hideki Yukawa awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics 1950 National Police Reserve predecessor of the Japan Ground Self Defense Force established August 10 1952 Allied occupation ends with the entry into force of the Treaty of San Francisco and the Security Treaty between the United States and Japan Continuation of stationing of the United States Forces Japan and American occupation of the Amami Islands Bonin Islands and Ryukyu Islands April 28 1953 Amami Islands under American occupation revert to Japan December 25 1954 the Japan Self Defense Forces established July 1 1955 the Liberal Democratic Party formed November 15 1956 Japan joins the United Nations December 18 1956 Japan signs the reparations agreement with the Philippines as compensation during the war and the Soviet Japanese Joint Declaration 1960 Labor strikes and protest marches across the country as part of the massive Anpo protests to oppose the adoption of a revised Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security between the United States and Japan June 23 1964 Shinkansen trains begin service October 1 and Summer Olympic Games held in Tokyo October 10 24 1965 Treaty on Basic Relations between Japan and the Republic of Korea entered into force December 18 Shin ichiro Tomonaga awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics 1968 the nuclear aircraft carrier Enterprise arrives in Sasebo amid controversy Itai itai disease is formally recognized as a public hazard disease Bonin Islands under American occupation revert to Japanese control Yasunari Kawabata receives the Nobel Prize in Literature A man disguised as a police officer steals 300 million still at large as of 2011 1969 Student protests erupt at several Japanese universities in opposition to campus policies and the Vietnam War The occupation of Tokyo University forces the administration to cancel the entrance exams Prime Minister Eisaku Satō and U S President Richard Nixon meet The date for the return of Ryukyu Islands Okinawa Prefecture to Japanese sovereignty set for sometime in 1972 1970 a World Exposition Expo 70 held in Osaka March 15 September 13 1971 the yen moves to a floating exchange rate contributing to a short slump in Japan s economic boom 1972 Ryukyu Islands under American occupation reverts to Japan as Okinawa Prefecture May 15 Normalization of diplomatic relations with the People s Republic of China September 29 1973 Japan joins the Group of Four Forming the Group of Five 1980 annual car production tops 10 million units making Japan the world s largest car producer after the USA Yomiuri Giants Sadaharu Oh ends his career 1981 Kenichi Fukui awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1982 the Tohoku Shinkansen extended to Morioka from Omiya 1983 Mt Oyama volcano on Miyakejima one of the Izu Islands erupts A color wall painting of Genbu is discovered in the Kitora Kofun at Asuka mura Kakuei Tanaka sentenced to four years in jail 1984 the president of Ezaki Glico Co Ltd a manufacturer of sweets is abducted and held for 10 billion and 100 kg gold ransom but he escapes Later an extortionist threatens to poison the company s products unless paid 60 million later raised to 120 million The culprit is never captured New banknotes issued with the likeness of Fukuzawa Yukichi on the 10 000 bill Inazo Nitobe on the 5 000 bill and Natsume Sōseki on the 1 000 bill 1985 the first AIDS patient is officially recognized Japan Airlines Flight 123 crashes into Mount Takamagahara breaking the record for aircraft crash casualties with 520 dead and only four survivors 1986 Mount Mihara Miharayama on Izu Ohshima erupts but the island s population is evacuated beforehand 1987 Japanese National Railways is privatized and split into seven JR Japan Railways companies six regional companies and one freight Actor Yujiro Ishihara dies 1988 the Seikan Tunnel connecting Hokkaido and Honshu completed The Nadashio a Maritime Self Defense Force submarine collides with the Dai Ichi Fujimaru a fishing vessel 1989 Emperor Shōwa dies and his eldest son Akihito ascends to the throne January 7 Heisei era starts January 8 See also edit1980s in Japan 1990s in JapanReferences edit Andrew Gordon ed Postwar Japan as history Univ of California Press 1993 online Michael Schaller Securing the Great Crescent Occupied Japan and the origins of containment in Southeast Asia Journal of American History 69 2 1982 392 414 online Chalmers Johnson Tanaka Kakuei structural corruption and the advent of machine politics in Japan Journal of Japanese Studies 12 1 1986 1 28 Kenneth B Pyle In pursuit of a grand design Nakasone betwixt the past and the future Journal of Japanese Studies 13 2 1987 243 270 JSTOR 132470 Hane Eastern Phoenix 2018 pp 97 124 Takeo Hoshi and Anil K Kashyap Will the US and Europe avoid a lost decade Lessons from Japan s postcrisis experience IMF Economic Review 63 1 2015 110 163 online Japan s first skyscraper turns 30 Japan Times 1998 04 17 Archived from the original on 2015 03 24 Hane Eastern Phoenix 2018 pp 28 35 Wythe Holt Union Densities Business Unionism and Working Class Struggle Labour Movement Decline in the United States and Japan 1930 2000 Labour Le Travail 59 2007 99 131 online Bert Edstrom Japan s evolving foreign policy doctrine from Yoshida to Miyazawa Springer 2016 Preface Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan see Mikiso Hane Eastern phoenix Japan since 1945 Routledge 2018 pp 173 202 Further reading editAllinson Gary D Japan s Postwar History Cornell University Press 2004 Cooney Kevin J Japan s Foreign Policy Since 1945 2006 Dower John W Embracing Defeat Japan in the Wake of World War II W W Norton amp Company 1999 Duus Peter ed The Cambridge history of Japan The Twentieth Century 1989 pp 154 216 on political history and 494 540 on economic history Edstrom Bert Japan s Evolving Foreign Policy Doctrine from Yoshida to Miyazawa Springer 2016 George Timothy S and Christopher Gerteis eds Japan since 1945 From Postwar to Post Bubble Bloomsbury Academic 2013 Gordon Andrew ed Postwar Japan as History Univ of California Press 1993 online a major overview of leading topics Hane Mikiso Eastern Phoenix Japan since 1945 Routledge 2018 excerpt Hashimoto Akiko The Long Defeat Cultural Trauma Memory and Identity in Japan Oxford University Press 2015 Hoover William D Historical Dictionary of Postwar Japan Scarecrow Press 2018 Kapur Nick 2018 Japan at the Crossroads Conflict and Compromise after Anpo Cambridge MA Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 6749 8442 4 Makoto Iokibe Caroline Rose et al eds Japanese Diplomacy in the 1950s From Isolation to Integration 2008 online Ruoff Kenneth J Japan s Imperial House in the Postwar Era 1945 2019 Harvard University Asia Center 2020 Watanabe Akio ed 2016 The Prime Ministers of Postwar Japan 1945 1995 Lanham MD Lexington Books ISBN 978 1 4985 1001 1 External links editHirata Tetsuo John W Dower Japan s Red Purge Lessons from a Saga of Suppression of Free Speech and Thought Preceded bySurrender of Japan History of JapanPostwar Japan1945 1989 Succeeded byHeisei Era Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Postwar Japan amp oldid 1221422111, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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