TY - BOOK AU - Okazaki,Hisahiko AU - Noda,Makito ED - Shuppan Bunka Sangyō Shinkō Zaidan, TI - Komura Jutarō and his time T2 - Japan Library SN - 9784866580722 AV - DS884.K585 O3313 2020 PY - 2020/// CY - Tokyo, Japan PB - Published by Japan Publishing Industry Foundation for Culture (JPIC) KW - Komura, Jutarō, KW - Diplomats KW - Japan KW - Biography KW - Foreign ministers KW - Russo-Japanese War, 1904-1905 KW - Diplomatic relations KW - fast KW - Nihon-Rekishi-Meiji jidai KW - jlabsh/4 KW - Foreign relations KW - 1868-1912 KW - Biographies KW - lcgft N1 - "Originally published in Japanese by PHP Institute, Inc., in 2003 under the title of Komura Jutarō to sono jidai."--Title page verso; "English translation ©2020 The Japan Institute of International Affairs (JIIA)."--Page 4; "Chronological Table of Komura Jutarō's Life and Accomplishments": pages 261-270; Includes bibliographical references (pages 258-259) and index N2 - "Exploring the life of Komura Jutaro, a defining force in the fate of Japan as a developing power, this critical biography casts the history of Japanese modernization in a captivating light. After the Meiji Restoration, the Sino-Japanese War, and the Russo-Japanese War, Japan found itself occupying a prominent position in the global arena. Komura Jutaro, whom Mutsu Munemitsu had chosen as his successor, served on the Katsura Taro cabinet and set to forging a plan for Japan's continental development in opposition to Russia, considering the influence of the United States and Britain. Komura accurately judged that Japan had no other option than war with Russia, given his piercing insights into Russia's intentions, and that recognition enabled the Empire of Japan to stay on the right track. All the other merits and demerits of Komura's diplomacy are directly connected to the merits and demerits of the steps taken by the Empire of Japan that eventually led to the country's defeat in World War II. Komura's diplomacy thus calls into question Japan's national strategy itself: consistently pursuing independent diplomacy instead of entrusting Japan's fate to collaboration with the Anglo-American world and, in Asia, expanding Japan's exclusive sphere of influence beyond the Korean Peninsula deep into the Asian continent. The book does not intend to uncover or delve deeper into new historical facts in the scope of modern history. Rather, its chief aim is to lay out a historical picture that situates the relative importance of objective facts in proper balance"-- ER -