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Few Americans have examined carefully the nation whose economy and industry is bound up with their own, whose future will inescapably shape theirs--Japan, that is. Dutch journalist Karel van Wolferen does the job, and very well indeed, depicting a Japan alternately awed and disgusted by the world beyond its shores, governed by a puppet emperor in the service of the zaikaijin, a gerontocracy of businessmen who control the national economy, just as they have done for generations. Their hierarchy is reinforced by the fear that, as in 1945, hostile powers will not only overpower the Japanese economy but denature the Japanese people, introducing foreign concepts of democracy and even the specter of an "impure race." Although Van Wolferen balances his account by highlighting what he regards as positive Japanese traits, including thrift, respect for elders, industriousness, and self-control, The Enigma of Japanese Power remains a controversial text in the nation it assays to describe with discomforting accuracy.
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From Publishers Weekly
Here at last is a first-rate book by a Westerner on the obfuscations and realities of Japanese politics. Japan is not a constitutionalist state with a free market economy, stresses van Wolferen, for over 20 years a journalist in Tokyo. With almost stupefying thoroughness he shows that the Japanese are ruled by what he calls "the System," an elite, tightly woven web of administrators ( daimyos in pin-striped suits, so to speak) who, despite being leaderless and therefore not in control of themselves, perpetuate their power by "managing" reality through intimidation, indoctrination and the subtle promotion of certain myths, particularly that of their own benevolence. The myths include these: that the Japanese are "unique"; that foreigners don't "understand" them; that Western firms fail in Japan because they "don't try hard enough"; and that the Japanese are victims of history, even of World War II. The country now seems on a collision course with the rest of the industrialized world, the Dutch author bleakly concludes, and since only something akin to revolution is likely to change the System, it's up to the West to devise "wise policies" in regard to it. To call the book controversial is to miss the depth of its insights.
Copyright 1989 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Copyright 1989 Reed Business Information, Inc.