Comparatively speaking, this 7-chapter, 156-page paperback published in 2010 could be categorized as a concise book on Japanese history in spite of the fact that Japan herself has long since been the country with more than 1,000 years of inception, civil wars, the Western challenge, religious developments, fascinating cultural traditions, one of the pioneers in economy, high technologies, infrastructure as well as world-class green and clean environment, etc. One of the reasons is that each chapter has to be as precise as it can be by the authoritative understanding and expertise of Prof. James L. Huffman. I think its contents should be revealed as an overview as follows:
Chapter 1 Before the Brush (to 645 CE)
2 Emperors and Aristocrats: Rule by Law and Taste (645-1160)
3 Warriors: The Long Rise (1160-1550)
4 Peace – And Its Benefits (1550-1850)
5 The Nation Transformed (1850-1905)
6 Engaging the World, for Good and for Ill (1905-1945)
7 A New Kind of Power (after 1945)
There are altogether 21 black and white photos scattered in all chapters and 3 maps that definitely help the readers to grasp ideas and imagine visions by means of such printed media related to their content contexts. As for its appendix, they can fulfill their understanding and knowledge by searching more information from these useful topics: Chronology, Notes, Further Reading, Websites, Acknowledgments, and Index.
Since it’s tedious to cite interesting parts from each chapter; therefore, I’d like to suggest only two excerpts from Chapter 7, that is, from the opening paragraph and the last one’s three final sentences as follows:
When the Showa emperor opened the Tokyo Olympics on October 10, 1964, few missed the significance. Here was Japan’s wartime sovereign, presiding over a gathering of 75,000 spectators and 5,000 athletes from ninety-four nations. The torch-lighter was a Waseda University runner born in Hiroshima the day the atomic bomb was dropped. When the game closed two weeks later, Japan had won a recorded sixteen gold medals, and journalists had rhapsodized about the country’s reentry into the community of nations. Olympics president Avery Brundage declared Japan the “Olympic nation No. 1 in all the world.” (p. 109)
… When the sun goddess was troubled by pernicious behaviors in prehistoric times, she shut herself up in a cave to avoid seeing evil. No one envisioned a similar withdrawal by today’s leaders. A more likely model lay in the seventh century’s Suiko and Shotoku Taishi, who, when faced by challenges, sought wisdom abroad and wrote a constitution urging officials to “attend the court early in the morning, and retire late” because “the whole day is hardly enough.” (p. 128)
Briefly, this book (from its format, probably a textbook) is manageably studied and readable for its concise contents, it would be a must for any reader keen on reading anything Japanese, especially her unique fascinating history.