‘Japanese fascism’ is a historiographical construct rather than a historical reality. Whether Japan’s sociopolitical developments in the 1930s and early 1940s can be legitimately and authoritatively defined as ‘fascist’ depends on the triangulation of three axes of analysis: historical reconstructions of institutional, political, social, and ideological processes; historiographical surveys of the palimpsest of interpretations historians have given to this period of Japanese history; and metahistorical analyses of the cognitive legitimacy of the category of ‘fascism’. This essay focuses on the second axis, offering a historical survey of the historiographical debate on ‘Japanese fascism’ worldwide.
CITATION STYLE
Marcon, F. (2021). The Quest for Japanese Fascism: A Historiographical Overview. In Ca’ Foscari Japanese Studies: Religion and Thought (Vol. 14, pp. 53–86). Edizioni Ca’ Foscari. https://doi.org/10.30687/978-88-6969-527-8/004
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