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The Mayor of Aihara

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Aizawa Kikutarõ (1866-1963) was born into the wealthiest family in Hashimoto, a small agricultural village specializing in wheat and silk. By 1925, the village was undergoing rapid commercial devel...
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  • 13 July 2009
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Aizawa Kikutarõ (1866-1963) was born into the wealthiest family in Hashimoto, a small agricultural village specializing in wheat and silk. By 1925, the village was undergoing rapid commercial development, residents were commuting to factory and office jobs in cities, and, after serving as mayor for almost twenty years, Aizawa was working as a bank manager. Taking the biography of this leading villager as its central focus and incorporating intimate details of life drawn from Aizawa's diary, The Mayor of Aihara chronicles the extraordinary transformation of Hashimoto against the background of Japan's rapid industrialization. By portraying history as it was actually lived by ordinary people, the book offers a rich and compelling perspective on the modernization of Japan.
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Price: $29.95
Pages: 248
Publisher: University of California Press
Imprint: University of California Press
Publication Date: 13 July 2009
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780520258594
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

“”It is a historical ethnography that is both sweeping and situated, eminently useful for courses but equally instructive to scholars.”
Simon Partner, Associate Professor at Duke University, is author of Toshié: A Story of Rural Life in Twentieth Century Japan and Assembled in Japan: Electrical Goods and the Making of the Japanese Consumer (both from UC Press).
List of Illustrations
Introduction

1. The Village Enters the Modern Era (1866 – 1885)
Born in Troubled Times
Building a New Nation
Hardship and Protest

2. From Farm Manager to Independent Landowner (1885 – 1894)
A Young Man of the Enlightenment
Reaching Maturity in Momentous Times
Toward Independence

3. For Village and Nation (1894 – 1908)
The Nation Comes of Age
Politics on the Kanto Plain
The Mantle of Responsibility
The Hour of Need
The Railway Comes to Hashimoto

4. The Mayor of Aihara (1908 – 1918)
Mayor of Aihara
Technology and Change
A Great Sadness

5. A World Transformed (1918 – 1926)
An Unprecedented Economy
A Modern Village
The World Turned Upside Down
The Family Patriarch

Conclusion
Did Hashimoto Ever Become “Modern”?
Villagers in Control of Their Destiny?
The Meaning of a Life

Notes
Bibliography
Index