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Abstract
PAUL E. DUNSCOMB
"A Great Disobedience Against the
People":
Popular Press Criticism of Japan's Siberian Intervention, 1918-22
Reports and commentary by Japanese
mass-circulation newspapers on the Siberian Intervention reflect deep
ambivalence about the enterprise. Some criticism of government policy
reflected traditional concerns; but a new strain of criticism, unique in
the prewar period, claimed that Japan was out of step with the spirit of
international cooperation among the leading democratic powers that emerged
victorious at the end of World War I. While initially demanding a
"responsible" party government to end the intervention, as the
unprofitable stalemate continued, the papers came to lambaste both
ineffective party cabinets and the military for ignoring public opinion.
Volume
32, Number 1 (Winter 2006) © 2006 Society for
Japanese Studies
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