In the historical literature on Japan, rural people have tended to be regarded as the exploited victims of the industrialisation process. This book provides an alternative view of the role and significance of the rural economy in Japan's emergence as an economic power prior to World War II.

Using theories and approaches derived from development studies and economic history the book describes the nineteenth-century development of a diversified, proto-industrial rural economy, focusing on the strategies employed by households as they sought to secure and improve their livelihoods. The book argues that rural people, through their 'industrious revolution', played an active part in determining the course of Japan's agrarian transition and, eventually, the distinctive features of industrial Japan's political economy, with the result that rural life still figures largely in the reality and imagination of contemporary Japan.



Autorentext

Penelope Francks



Inhalt

1. Rethinking Rural Japan Part 1: The Nineteenth Century: The Establishment of the Diversified Rural Economy 2. Rural Economic Growth in the Nineteenth Century 3. The Rural Economy and the Household 4. Power, Policy and Resistance in the Nineteenth-Century Countryside Part 2: The Agrarian Transition, 1890-1920 5. The Rural Sector and Urban Industrialization 6. The Household and the Village in Transition 7. The Agrarian Question: The Rural Economy and the State Part 3: The Inter-War Years: Crisis and Modernization 8. The 'Rural Problem' of the Inter-War Period 9. The Rural Household and the Agricultural Adjustment Problem 10. The Rural Dream 11. Conclusion

Titel
Rural Economic Development in Japan
Untertitel
From the Nineteenth Century to the Pacific War
EAN
9781134207862
ISBN
978-1-134-20786-2
Format
ePUB
Herausgeber
Veröffentlichung
28.06.2006
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Adobe-DRM
Anzahl Seiten
320
Jahr
2006
Untertitel
Englisch