

The Clash
544 pages1998W. W. Norton & CompanyISBN 9780393318371
Foreign relationsRelations extérieuresAu enpolitikBuitenlandse betrekkingenHistoireGeschichteUnited states, foreign relations, japanJapan, foreign relations, united states
About this book
When Commodore Matthew Perry sailed into Tokyo harbor in July 1853, opening Japan to the West, Americans and Japanese immediately began to clash with each other. For the past century, this clash has focused especially on which nation would take the lead in developing China's economic potential. The relationship between the United States and Japan and the competition over China remain immensely important, highly explosive, and little understood on either side of the Pacific.
Walter LaFeber, one of America's leading historians, has written the first book to tell the entire story.
Using a full array of American and Japanese sources, LaFeber provides the history to understand these long-rooted differences, bringing us to the present-day tensions in U.S.-Japanese trade talks, the vicissitudes of rearming Japan, Japan's continuing importance in financing America's huge deficit, and the looming economic shadow of China - not only the world's most populous century but certain to be the next economic superpower.
Publication Details
- Publisher
- W. W. Norton & Company
- Published
- 1998
- Pages
- 544
- ISBN
- 9780393318371
About Unknown Author
Walter Fredrick LaFeber (August 30, 1933 – March 9, 2021) was an American academic who served as the Andrew H. and James S. Tisch Distinguished University Professor in the Department of History at Cornell University. Previous to that he served as the Marie Underhill Noll Professor of History and a Stephen H. Weiss Presidential Fellow at Cornell. Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_LaFeber
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