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The growing power of Japan, 1967-1972 : analysis and assessments from John Pilcher and the British Embassy, Tokyo /

John Pilcher's appointment as HM Ambassador to Japan in 1967, three years after the widely acclaimed Tokyo Olympics, was both judicious and enlightened. His role was to be that of a bridge-builder between Japan and Britain following the early post-war years of disenchantment, distrust and detac...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Pilcher, John, 1912-1990
Otros Autores: Cortazzi, Hugh (Editor )
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Folkestone, Kent : Renaissance Books, 2015.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Cover; Half Title; Title; Copyright; Dedication; Contents; Foreword
  • Ian Nish; Publisher's Preface
  • Paul Norbury; Acknowledgements; Introduction
  • Hugh Cortazzi; Part 1: 1967; 1. Sir Francis Rundall's Valedictory Despatch; 2. Japanese Economic Aid; 3. The State Funeral for Mr Shigeru Yoshida; 4. Japan: Annual Review for 1967; Part 2: 1968; 5. Visit of the Secretary of State to Japan, 7-10 January; 6. The Visit of USS Enterprise to Japan; 7. Impressions of Contemporary Japan; 8. The 58th (Regular) Diet Session; 9. The Sôka Gakkai and the Kômeitô
  • 10. Japanese Economic Success: A British Opportunity11. The Japanese Left; 12. The Japanese Mood; 13. Mr Sato's New Cabinet; 14. Japan: Annual Review, 1968; Part 3: 1969; 15. Revolting Students: Japanese Style; 16. Japan's Science and Technology; 17. Labour and Incomes in the Japanese Economy; 18. British Week, Tokyo; 19. The Merry Wives of Ginza: Women's Status in Japan; 20. The Quality of Life in Japan; 21. Japan: Annual Review, 1969; 22. The Japanese Self-Defence Forces; Part 4: 1970; 23. Osaka Expo '70: A First Impression; 24. The Japanese Mood in 1970
  • 25. Japan's Economy in the 1970s: The Miracle Excels Itself26. Japan's Changing Society and the New Generation; 27. Japanese Exports: How Much of a Threat?; 28. Japanese Protectionism: Signs of a Thaw?; Plate section faces; 29. 'The Rest are Monkeys': The Japanese Abroad; 30. Japan in the 1970s: The Trade Mark and the Sword; 31. Japanese Militarism; 32. Mishima's Suicide; 33. Japan: Annual Review for 1970
  • 'Economic Man' Comes of Age; Part 5: 1971
  • The Showa Emperor; 34. The Emperor of Japan: The Man and His Life; 35. The Emperor of Japan: Human or Divine?
  • 36. The Emperor and Empress of Japan37. The Visit of the Emperor and Empress of Japan to Europeas Seen from Tokyo; 38. Mr Sato's New Cabinet; 39. Relations Between Japan and the United States; 40. Japan in 1971: The Rude Awakening; Part 6: Sir John Pilcher's Last Months In Japan; 41. Japan in the 1970s: 'Guns and Butter'; 42. Japanese Export Successes: Cheap, Sweated Labour?; 43. Basic Japan and the Shifting Mood 1967-71; 44. The Japanese: 'Frail Flowers of Opportunism'?; Part 7: 1972
  • A New Era For The British Mission; 45. The Lord Privy Seal Brings Concorde to Japan
  • 46. The Plebian Mr Tanaka Replaces Mr Sato47. Japanese Investments Overseas; 48. Mr Tanaka in Charge; 49. The Japanese on the Road to Peking; 50. The First Visit to Japan by a British Prime Minister; Appendices; I 'Sir John Pilcher: Ambassador to Japan, 1967-1972'. Portraitby Hugh Cortazzi; II Letter from Kyoto, January 1936; III 'A Perspective on Religion in Japan' (Lecture at the Nissan Institute,May 1984); IV 'Is Economic Success Destroying Japanese Traditions?'(Occasional Paper/Speech, 1975); V Book Review, 1977: Deus Destroyed:The Image of Christianity in Early Modern Japan