Established in 1974, the Journal of Japanese Studies features original, analytically rigorous articles from across the humanities and social sciences, including comparative and transnational scholarship in which Japan plays a major part

Orbach 42:1

ABSTRACT

DANNY ORBACH
“By Not Stopping”: The First Taiwan Expedition (1874) and the
Roots of Japanese Military Disobedience

On April 26, 1874, Lieutenant General Saigō Tsugumichi, the commander of an impending Japanese invasion to Taiwan, was ordered by the Meiji government to withhold the expedition at the last moment, but he defied his political leaders and invaded the island.  This article explores what circumstances led Saigō to disobey and how his decision indirectly helped to shape the legal and institutional basis for the later autonomy of the Japanese army.  This autonomy engendered in turn a culture of military disobedience that haunted the imperial armed forces up to the 1930s.

Volume 42, Number 1 (Winter 2016)
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