Preface 1. Wartime Events, Historical Hindsights and Insights 2. Kamikaze Attacks, Planning Before and After the Fall of Saipan 3. Tôjô Hideki, Man of His Times 4. Failing Strategy, Lack of War Materials, and Tôjô's Fall 5. Capitulation: Hubris and Unquestioning Belief in a Religious Ideology, Some Conclusions Bibliography Index
A political and military history of Imperial Japan's defeat in the Second World War from the perspective of the Japanese.
Peter Wetzler is Senior Research Fellow at the Ostasieninstitut, Germany. He is the author of Imperial Tradition and Military Decision Making in Prewar Japan (1998) and Yugamerareta Showa Tennozo. Obei to Nihon no Gokai to Goyaku (co-authored with Naomi Moriyama, 2006).
The merit of the book is in its rich exposition of primary sources.
The Sho¯wa tenno¯ jitsuroku and the archives of the Japanese
National Institute for Defense Studies and the Imperial
Headquarters Army Department are enormous and require
time-consuming, often tedious, work. Scholars of modern Japan thus
will fi nd a lot of valuable information here.
*Journal of Japanese Studies*
In this study of Japan during WWII, Wetzler offers a useful summary
of historiographical debates surrounding key issues in the history
of that war, including those surrounding Hirohito's alleged wartime
culpability, making use of new Japanese-language materials to stake
his own positions in those debates.
*CHOICE*
[One] of the better studies of how Japan reaped the whirlwind in
its half-century to rule Asia.
*The Warbird Forum*
[An] informed and cogent analysis for anyone seriously interested
in Emperor Hirohito and the war he helped to make and unmake.
*Michigan War Studies Review*
In this thought-provoking book, Peter Wetzler explores why Imperial
Japan continued to fight long after the war had been obviously
lost. His argument that the explanation lies in the interplay of a
religious-political conception of the nation and the power of the
modern state will be of great interest to historians of the Second
World War.
*Joe Maiolo, Professor of International History, King's College
London, UK*
The brilliance of its conception is the real value of Imperial
Japan and Defeat in the Second World War. Rather than writing a
traditional narrative synthesizing postwar scholarship, Peter
Wetzler highlights the different versions of what happened offered
by those who made key decisions or were present at the discussions
that led to these decisions, those eager to conceal their
complicity or cover up their mistakes, partisans of the imperial
family, and both Japanese and Western scholars.
*Samuel H. Yamashita, Henry E. Sheffield Professor of History,
Pomona College, USA*
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