Article Evaluation edit

Taishō period

This article is full of information without citations. It is my plan to source some of the information within the article and fix any unfounded information.

[1]Reischauer, E., & Craig, E. A. (1973). Tradition and Transformation. Bostons Houghton Mifflin Co.

[2]Shimbori, M. (1963). Comparison between pre-and post-war student movements in Japan. Sociology of Education, 59-70.

[3]Hoston, G. A. (1984). Marxism and national socialism in taishō Japan: The thought of Takabatake Motoyuki. The Journal of Asian Studies, 44(1), 43-64.

This section of the Taisho Period page can be sourced back to: https://www.gale.com/binaries/content/assets/gale-us-en/primary-sources/archives-unbound/primary-sources_archives-unbound_japan-at-war-and-peace-1930-1949_u.s.-state-department-records-on-the-internal-affairs-of-japan.pdf

"The public grew disillusioned with the growing national debt and the new election laws, which retained the old minimum tax qualifications for voters. Calls were raised for universal suffrage and the dismantling of the old political party network. Students, university professors, and journalists, bolstered by labor unions and inspired by a variety of democratic, socialist, communist, anarchist, and other Western schools of thought, mounted large but orderly public demonstrations in favor of universal male suffrage in 1919 and 1920. New elections brought still another Seiyūkai majority, but barely so. In the political milieu of the day, there was a proliferation of new parties, including socialist and communist parties".

I would also like to expand on End of the Taishō Democracy

Tomasi, M. (2004). Studies of Western Rhetoric in Modern Japan: The Years between Shimamura Hōgetsu's" Shin bijigaku"(1902) and the End of the Taishō Era. Nichibunken Japan Review, 161-190.

Woods, S. (2004). Japan: an illustrated history. Hippocrene Books.

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