Tuesday, October 1, 2019
The Causes of the Showa Restoration :: Historical Periods Showa Restoration Essays
The Causes of the Showa Restoration      Sonno joi, "Restore the Emperor and expel the Barbarians," was the  battle cry that ushered in the Showa Restoration in Japan during the  1930's.Footnote1 The Showa Restoration was a combination of Japanese nationalism,  Japanese expansionism, and Japanese militarism all carried out in the name of  the Showa Emperor, Hirohito. Unlike the Meiji Restoration, the Showa Restoration  was not a resurrection of the Emperor's powerFootnote2, instead it was aimed at  restoring Japan's prestige. During the 1920's, Japan appeared to be developing a  democratic and peaceful government. It had a quasi-democratic governmental body,  the Diet,Footnote3 and voting rights were extended to all male  citizens.Footnote4 Yet, underneath this seemingly placid surface, lurked  momentous problems that lead to the Showa Restoration. The transition that Japan  made from its parliamentary government of the 1920's to the Showa Restoration  and military dictatorship of the late 1930s was not a sudden transformation.  Liberal forces were not toppled by a coup overnight. Instead, it was gradual,  feed by a complex combination of internal and external factors.  The history that links the constitutional settlement of 1889 to the  Showa Restoration in the 1930s is not an easy story to relate. The  transformation in Japan's governmental structure involved; the historical period  between 1868 and 1912 that preceded the Showa Restoration. This period of  democratic reforms was an underlying cause of the militarist reaction that lead  to the Showa Restoration. The transformation was also feed by several immediate  causes; such as, the downturn in the global economy in 1929Footnote5 and the  invasion of Manchuria in 1931.Footnote6 It was the convergence of these external,  internal, underlying and immediate causes that lead to the military dictatorship  in the 1930's.  The historical period before the Showa Restoration, 1868-1912, shaped  the political climate in which Japan could transform itself from a democracy to  a militaristic state. This period is known as the Meiji Restoration.Footnote7  The Meiji Restoration of 1868 completely dismantled the Tokugawa political order  and replaced it with a centralized system of government headed by the Emperor  who served as a figure head.Footnote8 However, the Emperor instead of being a  source of power for the Meiji Government, became its undoing. The Emperor was  placed in the mystic position of demi-god by the leaders of the Meiji  Restoration. Parliamentarians justified the new quasi-democratic government of  Japan, as being the "Emperor's Will." The ultra-nationalist and militaristic  groups took advantage of the Emperor's status and claimed to speak for the  Emperor.Footnote9 These then groups turned the tables on the parliamentarians by  claiming that they, not the civil government, represented the "Imperial Will."  The parliamentarians, confronted with this perversion of their own policy,    					    
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