EBOOK

Rioters and Citizens
Mass Protest in Imperial Japan
Michael LewisSeries: Center for Japanese Studies, UC Berkeley(0)
About
On 22 July 1918 a group of Japanese fishermen's wives met in a small village on the coast to discuss what they could do to lower the spiraling cost of rice. This peaceful meeting gave rise to the 1918 race riots, a series of mass demonstrations and armed clashes that spread rapidly throughout the country on a scale unprecedented in modern Japanese history. In this penetrating study, Michael Lewis questions standard historical interpretations of the riots. What political significance did the riots have in the communities where they occurred? How and why did protest change from region to region or when carried out by different groups? How did officials, community leaders, and businessmen cope with the unrest? What effects did the riots have on national and local political relations and economic ties among these various groups? Lewis argues that the 1918 protests defy a single typology-urban and rural protests had different causes, patterns, forms of mediation, and resolutions. In 1918 Meiji leaders had been struggling for fifty years to create a new citizenry, unified ideologically and consistently supportive of national goals. The disunity revealed by the riots does not suggest that Japan had become polarized between the people and the state; rather, in the wake of the riots, new forms of social policy and public political involvement became possible. In analyzing the changing traditions of Japanese popular protest in the transition from a rural to an industrial economy, Rioters and Citizens suggests that the diversity of Japanese protests necessitates a rethinking of the stereotypical images of prewar Japanese society as blandly uniform and rigidly controlled by government ideology. It further suggests that in Japan, as in Europe, the action of the unenfranchised crowd came to influence the course of political and social change. This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press's mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1990.
Related Subjects
Extended Details
- SeriesCenter for Japanese Studies, UC Berkeley #24
Artists
Similar Artists
Andrew Ross Sorkin
Anns Lembke, M. D.
Antonio Garcia Martinez
Ben Mezrich
Bill James
Brian Christian
Charles R. Morris
David Carey
Diana B. Henriques
Duff McDonald
Edward E. Smith
Elaine Fox
Erin Arvedlund
George Gilder
Grant Tucker
Greg Milner
James Owen Weatherall
Janna Levin
Jeff Passan
Jeffrey E. Garten
Jim Bouton
Jimmy Breslin
Jim Rogers
Jonah Keri
Jordan Belfort
Keith Law
Kenneth S. Rogoff
Kevin Roose
Larry Olmsted
Lawrence Levy
Liaquat Ahamed
Maneet Ahuja
Mark Sundeen
Martin Kihn
Michele Wucker
Nicholas Stargardt
Norman Ohler
Richard Fortey
Richard H. Thaler
Robert Strauss
Sarah Cooper
Scott Barry Kaufman
Scott Solomon
Stephen J. Dubner
Todd Gerelds
Travis Sawchik