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In the Mountain's Shadow: Japan's Silk Reelers Blazed an Asian Path of Economic Development
引用本文:YoichiShimatsu. In the Mountain's Shadow: Japan's Silk Reelers Blazed an Asian Path of Economic Development[J]. 山地科学学报, 2004, 1(2): 183-191. DOI: 10.1007/BF02919340
作者姓名:YoichiShimatsu
摘    要:Exploring the history of the silk-reeling industry in Chichibu, Japan, this paper challenges the prevalent representation of mountain communities as marginal economic peripheries of the metropolitan center or as reservoirs of poverty and backwardness. Mountain districts were the cradle of an Asian “industrious” revolution that led to Japan‘s modernization. The highland-based silk-reeling producers pioneered an autonomous Asian model of industrial development, which competed successfully against the capital-intensive system introduced from the West into coastal cities. The export strength of silk-producing households in upland villages overturns the claim that Japan‘s economic miracle was based on the introduction of Western technology and administrative systems. To the contrary, the Asian-style management practices and labor standards developed by the silk producers were transferred to a succession of other industries. These indigenous practices account for the rise of Japanese industry in world markets. The clash between the two opposing models of modernization resulted in modern Japan‘s first major civil conflict, the Chichibu Rebellion of 1884, a legacy that has major implications for today‘s recession-mired Japan as well as for developing countries striving for an alternative path to economic development.

关 键 词:丝绸工业 工业经济 山区 经济史 日本 亚洲

In the Mountain’s shadow: Japan’s silk reelers blazed an asian path of economic development
Yoichi Shimatsu. In the Mountain’s shadow: Japan’s silk reelers blazed an asian path of economic development[J]. Journal of Mountain Science, 2004, 1(2): 183-191. DOI: 10.1007/BF02919340
Authors:Yoichi Shimatsu
Affiliation:(1) Editor of The Japan Times Weekly in Tokyo, Japan;(2) The founding faculty member of the Journalism and Media Studies Centre at The University of Hong Kong, China;(3) the School of Journalism and Communication at Tsinghua University in Beijing, China
Abstract:Exploring the history of the silk-reeling industry in Chichibu, Japan, this paper challenges the prevalent representation of mountain communities as marginal economic peripheries of the metropolitan center or as reservoirs of poverty and backwardness. Mountain districts were the cradle of an Asian “industrious” revolution that led to Japan’s modernization. The highland-based silk-reeling producers pioneered an autonomous Asian model of industrial development, which competed successfully against the capital-intensive system introduced from the West into coastal cities. The export strength of silk-producing households in upland villages overturns the claim that Japan’s economic miracle was based on the introduction of Western technology and administrative systems. To the contrary, the Asian-style management practices and labor standards developed by the silk producers were transferred to a succession of other industries. These indigenous practices account for the rise of Japanese industry in world markets. The clash between the two opposing models of modernization resulted in modern Japan’s first major civil conflict, the Chichibu Rebellion of 1884, a legacy that has major implications for today’s recession-mired Japan as well as for developing countries striving for an alternative path to economic development.
Keywords:Mountain economics  silk industry  Japanese economic history  Asian development
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