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American Shogun - Non-Fiction
General MacArthur, Emperor Hirohito and the Drama of Modern Japan |
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Robert Harvey - 2006 |
Hardcover |
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American Shogun - Non-Fiction
General MacArthur, Emperor Hirohito and the Drama of Modern Japan |
|
Robert Harvey - 2006 |
Hardcover |
|
|
American Shogun - Non-Fiction
General MacArthur, Emperor Hirohito and the Drama of Modern Japan |
|
Robert Harvey - 2006 |
Hardcover |
|
|
American Shogun - Non-Fiction
General MacArthur, Emperor Hirohito and the Drama of Modern Japan |
|
Robert Harvey - 2006 |
Hardcover |
|
|
American Shogun - Non-Fiction
General MacArthur, Emperor Hirohito and the Drama of Modern Japan |
|
Robert Harvey - 2006 |
Hardcover |
|
|
American Shogun - Non-Fiction
General MacArthur, Emperor Hirohito and the Drama of Modern Japan |
|
Robert Harvey - 2006 |
Hardcover |
|
In the years and months leading up to Pearl Harbor, Japan was becoming the most industrialized state in Asia, as well as the repository of a martial heritage that fueled imperial ambitions of conquest and hegemony. Across the Pacific, the United States was emerging from the depression and again growing into its role as a global power. Today's partnership between modern Japan-now Asia's most well-developed democracy-and the United States-the world's sole superpower-was forged by the confrontation, and finally the reconciliation, of these two competing agendas and cultures in World War II, a drama that was defined by two men: General Douglas MacArthur and Emperor Hirohito. |
In the years and months leading up to Pearl Harbor, Japan was becoming the most industrialized state in Asia, as well as the repository of a martial heritage that fueled imperial ambitions of conquest and hegemony. Across the Pacific, the United States was emerging from the depression and again growing into its role as a global power. Today's partnership between modern Japan-now Asia's most well-developed democracy-and the United States-the world's sole superpower-was forged by the confrontation, and finally the reconciliation, of these two competing agendas and cultures in World War II, a drama that was defined by two men: General Douglas MacArthur and Emperor Hirohito. |
In the years and months leading up to Pearl Harbor, Japan was becoming the most industrialized state in Asia, as well as the repository of a martial heritage that fueled imperial ambitions of conquest and hegemony. Across the Pacific, the United States was emerging from the depression and again growing into its role as a global power. Today's partnership between modern Japan-now Asia's most well-developed democracy-and the United States-the world's sole superpower-was forged by the confrontation, and finally the reconciliation, of these two competing agendas and cultures in World War II, a drama that was defined by two men: General Douglas MacArthur and Emperor Hirohito. |
In the years and months leading up to Pearl Harbor, Japan was becoming the most industrialized state in Asia, as well as the repository of a martial heritage that fueled imperial ambitions of conquest and hegemony. Across the Pacific, the United States was emerging from the depression and again growing into its role as a global power. Today's partnership between modern Japan-now Asia's most well-developed democracy-and the United States-the world's sole superpower-was forged by the confrontation, and finally the reconciliation, of these two competing agendas and cultures in World War II, a drama that was defined by two men: General Douglas MacArthur and Emperor Hirohito. |
In the years and months leading up to Pearl Harbor, Japan was becoming the most industrialized state in Asia, as well as the repository of a martial heritage that fueled imperial ambitions of conquest and hegemony. Across the Pacific, the United States was emerging from the depression and again growing into its role as a global power. Today's partnership between modern Japan-now Asia's most well-developed democracy-and the United States-the world's sole superpower-was forged by the confrontation, and finally the reconciliation, of these two competing agendas and cultures in World War II, a drama that was defined by two men: General Douglas MacArthur and Emperor Hirohito. |
In the years and months leading up to Pearl Harbor, Japan was becoming the most industrialized state in Asia, as well as the repository of a martial heritage that fueled imperial ambitions of conquest and hegemony. Across the Pacific, the United States was emerging from the depression and again growing into its role as a global power. Today's partnership between modern Japan-now Asia's most well-developed democracy-and the United States-the world's sole superpower-was forged by the confrontation, and finally the reconciliation, of these two competing agendas and cultures in World War II, a drama that was defined by two men: General Douglas MacArthur and Emperor Hirohito. |
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