Japanese Collection
The Japanese collection contains more than 128,000
titles in 172,000 volumes (August 31, 2003). Of these, some 40 percent
deal with politics, law, economics, public finance, sociology,
statistics, education, and defense. Other emphases include historical
and geographical works (25 percent of the collection), language and
literature (17 percent), and science and technology, including both
industry and agriculture (10 percent). The Japanese collection's 1800
serial titles include many left-wing journals of the 1920s and their
right-wing counterparts of the 1930s and 1940s.
Japan's colonial efforts in China are well represented
in the Japanese collection's diplomatic studies of Sino-Japanese
relations, in its holdings on Japanese policy toward China, in Japanese
treatises on colonial theory and management, and in a vast store of
administrative records and field studies relating to the affairs of the
Japanese empire. These and other holdings are cited in G. William
Skinner and Winston Hsieh's Modern Chinese Society: An Analytical
Bibliography. Publications in Japanese, 1644–1969 (Stanford
University Press, 1973).
The collection has many documents relating to the
Japanese occupation of Manchuria in the early 1930s. In addition to
contemporary newspapers and pamphlets, researchers may consult
publications of the South Manchuria Railway Company and of the puppet
Manchukuo government. Another puppet regime, maintained in North China
by the Japanese after 1937, is also well represented. (See Frederick W.
Mote, Japanese Sponsored Governments in China, 1937–1945,
Hoover Institution Press, 1954.)
Researchers interested in Japan's domestic history will
find impressive documentation of the social and economic
turmoil-rural-urban flight, strikes, food riots, and landlord-tenant
disputes-that resulted from Japan's headlong modernization drive in the
wake of the Meiji Restoration. Through government reports and other
materials in the Japanese collection, these events can be followed
almost day by day.
The extremist activism this tumult aroused and the
government's subsequent repression of leftist organizations are
recorded in the holdings of party newspapers, pamphlets, and other
documents. (See Nobutake Ike, The Hoover Institution Collection on
Japan, Hoover Institution Press, 1958.)
The East Asian Collection has substantial holdings on
postwar Japan, including white papers, journals, newspapers, business
histories, and personal diaries.
Hoover
Archives Holdings on Japan
Other Japanese
Collection Finding Aids
Japanese
Reference Sources
Reference Contact and Recommending Library Purchases
For reference help with the Japanese collection or to
suggest Japanese-language titles for purchase, please contact:
Naomi Kotake
East Asia Library
J. Henry Meyer Library Bldg., Room 416
Stanford, CA 94305-6004
(650) 725-3437 voice
(650) 724-2028 fax
E-mail: Naomi Kotake
or
Fred Kotas
East Asia Library
J. Henry Meyer Library Bldg., Room 416
Stanford, CA 94305-6004
(650) 724-6660 voice
(650) 724-2028 fax
E-mail: Fred Kotas
Last modified: March 8, 2006
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