A product of international collaborative research, this collection
of essays by scholars from Japan, North America and Europe
illuminates the many important ways in which mobilization for total
war in the 1930s and early-1940s laid the foundation for "postwar
democracy." The essays, all but two of which focus primarily on the
Japanese case, analyze intellectual, political, and socioeconomic
processes that extend from the 1930s down as far as the 1970s, and
suggest that in this era not only Japan but Germany, the U.S., and
other advanced industrial nations formed "system societies"
characterized by rationalization, mobilization and high levels of
social integration and control.
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