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English Culture and the Decline ofthe Industrial Spirit 1850-1980
MARTIN J. WIENER
England was the world's first great industrial nation. Yet the English have never been eomfortable with industrialism. In this book Martin Wiener explores the English ambivalence to modern industrial society, analysing through a wide rangé of sources the social ethos which rejected the very sources of British prosperity.
This book attempts to relate the story [of Britain's decline] with expressions of British culture manifested in literature, politics and architecture — which, in the author's view, go along way to explaining the decline. Wiener accomplishes this task masterfully.' Peter Marsh, New Scientist
This is a book that anyone seeking to understand "the British disease" must read.' Correlli Barnett, Management Today
This book, by a distinguished Japanese economist now resident in the West, offers a new interpretation of the current success of the Japanese economy. By piacing the rise of...
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Fülszöveg
English Culture and the Decline ofthe Industrial Spirit 1850-1980
MARTIN J. WIENER
England was the world's first great industrial nation. Yet the English have never been eomfortable with industrialism. In this book Martin Wiener explores the English ambivalence to modern industrial society, analysing through a wide rangé of sources the social ethos which rejected the very sources of British prosperity.
This book attempts to relate the story [of Britain's decline] with expressions of British culture manifested in literature, politics and architecture — which, in the author's view, go along way to explaining the decline. Wiener accomplishes this task masterfully.' Peter Marsh, New Scientist
This is a book that anyone seeking to understand "the British disease" must read.' Correlli Barnett, Management Today
This book, by a distinguished Japanese economist now resident in the West, offers a new interpretation of the current success of the Japanese economy. By piacing the rise of Japan in the context of its historical development, Michio Morishima shows how a strongly-held national ethos has interacted with religious, social and technological ideas imported from elsewhere to produce highly distinctive cultural traits.
While Professor Morishima traces the roots of modern Japan back as far as the introduction of Confucianism, Taoism and Buddhism from China in the sixth century, he concentrates his observations on the last 120 years during which Japan has had extensive contacts with the West. He describes the swift rise of Japan to the status of a first-rate power following the Meiji Revolution after 1867, in which Japan broke with a long history of isolationism, and which paved the way for the adoption of Western technology and the creation of a modern Western-style ilation state; and a similarly meteoric rise from the devastation of the Second World War to Japan's present position. A rangé of factors in Japan's economic success are analysed: her characteristic dualistic social structure - corresponding to the divide between large and medium/small enterprises -the relations of government and big business, the poor reception of liberalism and individualism, and the strength of Japanese nationalism. Throughout, Professor Morishima emphasises the importance of the role played in the creation of Japanese capitalism by ethical doctrines as transformed under Japanese conditions, especially the Japanese Confucian tradition of complete loyalty to the firm and to the state.
This account, which makes clear the extent to which the economic rise of Japan is due to factors unique to its historical traditions, will be of interest to a wide generál readership as well as to students of Japan and its history.
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