It has been fifty years since Japan admitted defeat and accepted the terms of the Potsdam Declaration following World War II. At the time, Japan was in shambles, its imperial dream shattered, and its people reduced to scrounging for sufficient food to stay alive. Yet over the past half century, Japan has remade itself and emerged as one of the leading economic powers in the world. How did Japan achieve this success, and what has this remarkable rebirth meant for the Japanese people? In 'Eastern Phoenix', Mikiso Hane closely examines historical factors that have contributed to Japan's postwar development politically, economically, socially, and culturally.
Eastern Phoenix