
Robert B. Edgerton
Warriors of the Rising Sun
A History of the Japanese Military
A penetrating history of how the Japanese army,
once admired for its chivalry, became a legion of
brutality and atrocity.
During World War II, many of Japan's soldiers committed
such crimes against humanity that the world recoiled in
horror. During the notorious six-week-long "rape of Nanking" in
1937, Japanese forces murdered at least 200,000 men, women,
and children. Throughout the Pacific War, Allied prisoners
were often starved, tortured, beheaded, even cannibalized.
Although Japan's military men fought bravely and with resolve
against overwhelming numbers again and again, their astonishing
brutality made them a loathsome, unforgivable enemy.
While this chapter of Japanese history is well known,
few realize that earlier in this century the Japanese were
celebrated throughout the West for chivalry in warfare. During the
Boxer Rebellion in China and the savage Russo-Japanese War
of 19045, the Western press lauded the Japanese for their
kindness to the enemy wounded and imprisoned.
Warriors of the Rising Sun chronicles the Japanese
military's transformation from honorable "knights of Bushido" into
men of historic cruelty.
Author of over twenty books on
sociology and anthropology, Robert Edgerton teaches at the UCLA School of Medicine.
He lives in Los Angeles, California.
1997 / hardcover / ISBN 0-393-04085-2 /
Photographs / 384 pages / history/Japan
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