Apologies for the rerun, but the original link doesn’t work anymore:
“Desiring to Inaugurate Great Peace”: Yasuoka Masahiro, Kokutai Preservation, and Japan’s Imperial Rescript of Surrender
https://t.co/b0v7tXWmu3
Apologies for the rerun, but the original link doesn’t work anymore:
Perceptions of Fascism and the New Bureaucrats in Early Showa Japan
https://t.co/jbCfLyvMTw
An obscure minority perspective on the question of fascism in prewar Japan:
“Perceptions of Fascism and the New Bureaucrats in Early Shōwa Japan.” Saitama University Review (Faculty of Liberal Arts)・『埼玉大学紀要・教養学部』54(1) (2018): 69-103.
https://t.co/06U9xPJ7RN
“Desiring to Inaugurate Great Peace: Yasuoka Masahiro, Kokutai Preservation, and Japan’s Imperial Rescript of Surrender.”『埼玉大学紀要・教養学部』50(2) (2015): 199-231.
https://t.co/2MRCy6En8Y
Published during the 70th anniversary of the end of the war.
https://t.co/z7Iu8s17ix
恐縮ですが、昨年に発表した「安岡正篤の「東洋的な牧民思想」と内務官僚」という拙論へのリンクです。
A link to an essay I published last year considering the nationalist Yasuoka Masahiro's political thought and Home Ministry bureaucrats.
I called Kita Ikki a rightwing ‘revolutionary’ partly because that’s how his and his ilk were described by the U.S. Strategic Bombing Survey
This is Report No. 53a(90)(a), USSBS Index Section 2 https://t.co/qy5XJFvM95 https://t.co/haBnnjOnvm https://t.co/6EdPnXRs0x
@Andrew_Levidis @ernestleungmt It’s interesting that Kishi published 『日本戦時経済の進む途』(https://t.co/oeHonT4B2c) the same year and it has a preface by Kojima and he says they’re buddies! Perhaps it was a coordinated one-two punch?