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The history of Japanese aviation offers countless stories of heroic
achievements and dismal failures, passionate enthusiasm and sheer
terror, brilliant ideas and fatally flawed strategies. In Wings for
the Rising Sun, scholar and former airline pilot Jurgen Melzer
connects the intense drama of flight with a global history of
international cooperation, competition, and conflict. He details
how Japanese strategists, diplomats, and industrialists skillfully
exploited a series of major geopolitical changes to expand Japanese
airpower and develop a domestic aviation industry. At the same
time, the military and media orchestrated air shows,
transcontinental goodwill flights, and press campaigns to stir
popular interest in the national aviation project. Melzer analyzes
the French, British, German, and American influence on Japan's
aviation, revealing in unprecedented detail how Japanese
aeronautical experts absorbed foreign technologies at breathtaking
speed. Yet they also designed and built boldly original flying
machines that, in many respects, surpassed those of their mentors.
Wings for the Rising Sun compellingly links Japan's aeronautical
advancement with public mobilization, international relations, and
the transnational flow of people and ideas, offering a fresh
perspective on modern Japanese history.
The history of Japanese aviation offers countless stories of heroic
achievements and dismal failures, passionate enthusiasm and sheer
terror, brilliant ideas and fatally flawed strategies. In Wings for
the Rising Sun, scholar and former airline pilot Jurgen Melzer
connects the intense drama of flight with a global history of
international cooperation, competition, and conflict. He details
how Japanese strategists, diplomats, and industrialists skillfully
exploited a series of major geopolitical changes to expand Japanese
airpower and develop a domestic aviation industry. At the same
time, the military and media orchestrated air shows,
transcontinental goodwill flights, and press campaigns to stir
popular interest in the national aviation project. Melzer analyzes
the French, British, German, and American influence on Japan's
aviation, revealing in unprecedented detail how Japanese
aeronautical experts absorbed foreign technologies at breathtaking
speed. Yet they also designed and built boldly original flying
machines that, in many respects, surpassed those of their mentors.
Wings for the Rising Sun compellingly links Japan's aeronautical
advancement with public mobilization, international relations, and
the transnational flow of people and ideas, offering a fresh
perspective on modern Japanese history.
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