Japan The Modern History vol.2 : Telling A Story about Japan (FRESH MAN) by James Remar, Tim Roth and Perla Haney-Jardine
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Overview: In Part II, there will be an analysis of the statements about nationalism in the 1950s. As a foreshadowing, this chapter will outline the relationship between social conditions and speech during this period.
From the perspective of political events, the 1950s are considered to be a decade that began with the issue of peace and ended with a struggle for security. Regarding the background of this period, two social factors need to be clarified first.
First, in the 1950s, all people in the speech industry experienced wars. This situation continued until the second half of the 1960s, when the generation born after the war began to launch the all-communist movement.
As you can see in the following chapters, the leftist movement in the 1950s often used the term “nation”, and ignoring the relevance to the war period could not explain this phenomenon.
Second, the poverty level of Japanese society at that time was polarized in the economic and social fields. The economy that was abandoned by the war did not return to its pre-war level until around 1954. Even though Japan’s economy began to grow rapidly in the second half of the 1950s, people’s concerns about poverty and polarization still took a long time to completely disappear.
This chapter will focus on these two eras, especially the latter, to give an overview of the leftist nationalism in the 1950s.
Genre: Non-Fiction > History
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