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 Course is open for evaluations.  All lectures available online for review  Review session, pre exam: May 12, 6:00 pm, Maxwell Dworkin, G125  Final.

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Presentation on theme: " Course is open for evaluations.  All lectures available online for review  Review session, pre exam: May 12, 6:00 pm, Maxwell Dworkin, G125  Final."— Presentation transcript:

1  Course is open for evaluations.  All lectures available online for review  Review session, pre exam: May 12, 6:00 pm, Maxwell Dworkin, G125  Final exam: May 15 (Sat), 2pm  A-14: Emerson 104.  E1851 area students: Emerson 305 Wrapping up

2 Final Exam  1. Structure  I. Identification or matching of terms, events, people  II. Identify and contextualize excerpts from source readings:  Who produced it? Why?  For what audience? What do we learn of producer, of audience?  What are the limits to what it tells us?  III. Combination of medium and long answers (essays)  2. Coverage primarily modern, but about 1/4-1/3 premodern  Studying as a way to put together your understanding - more important than exam itself?!

3 Economy: Japan’s “Lost Decade” and lessons for America The bubble bursts: 1991-->

4 Economy, 2003-2008 Relatively strong GDP growth: 2003-2007 annual growth averages over 2% Unemployment falls under 4% Exports rise Especially to China

5 Explaining Japan’s “Lost Decade” (ver. 1) 1. Systemic crisis: the bankrupt transwar system A system that once worked, -developmental state -interfirm networks as dynamic -long-term labor commitments Stopped working -rigid state role -ineffective finance system -inflexible corporate organization Until systemic reform took place and took root

6 Explaining Japan’s “Lost Decade” (ver. 2) 2. Policy failures drag down a gradually changing but still-viable system Slow response to financial crisis Tax increase choked off recovery in ‘98 Eventually, through trial and error, got it right, (aided by “divine wind” of Chinese economy surge)

7 Lost decade lessons for America? Robert Feldman, Morgan Stanley Research report, 11/27/2008

8 Relation of recent past to longer modern history  Political  From ideological politics of transwar era (ca. 1930s-1980s)  “Back” to two parties, slightly different, working to stabilize capitalist system (rather than remake it)  Social  From postwar era of “attainable dream” of middle class life (always with some anxiety)  “Back” to era of widened, sharper social divisions of winners, losers, new poor, new rich

9 Relation of recent past to longer modern history  Economic  From transwar era of high growth (1930s, 1950s- 80s), “world model”  To an “ordinary” advanced economy  Geopolitical  Long “postwar” (to the present) as subordinate ally under American hegemony (and tensions around this  Long “modern” dilemma, find place between Asia and the West

10 Japan in Asian and global contexts  In context of Asia:  Early migration from and contacts with continent  Borrowing from China  Importance of trade during medieval age  In context of world:  Arms length, but not “closed,” Tokugawa era  Japan as participant in a global modernity  Political ideas and practices: democracy, empire  “modern life”: good wives, wise mothers; salarymen; modern girls and boys

11 Connecting past to present  History as evolution forward  Buddhist institutions and world views  Tokugawa economic development as base of Meiji capitalism  Understandings of constitutional government: Chiba to Yoshino to Kita  Prewar and wartime industrial policy as platform for postwar  History as “storehouse” (inventing tradition)  Tokugawa Ieyasu as a “sage” king  The 20 th c. creation of warrior ideal (bushidō)  Justifying Western dress with Nara era practice  A hybrid monarchy: Heian, Prussian, Victorian, and even Hollywood elements


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