Description

Book Synopsis
This work documents the drawn-out debates and the decisions that led to the complete reunification of the Amami Islands with Japan. It traces the US military's insistence on occupying Okinawa and the Amami Islands under the rationale of increased international security.

Trade Review
Eldridge has produced a well-researched monograph on a relevant but hertofore unexamined epidose in US-Japan relations. . .. Taking advantage of recently declassified US and Japanese documents as well as memoirs and reminiscences of participants from both sides, the author tells for the first time the story of bilateral relations leading to reversion. The book will appeal to students of international and US-Japan relations in post-WWII Asia and the Pacific. * CHOICE *
With painstakingly detailed accounts of U.S. policy-making meetings, document drafts and debates, Eldridge demonstrates that the Amami Reversion Movement merits greater attention than it has received to date. -- Dennis J. Frost, Columbia University, New York, NY, U.S.A. * Pacific Affairs, Vol. 78, No. 1 --Spring 2005 *
The book provides a good picture of civil society activism early in Japan's fledging democracy. . . . [Eldridge] paints a picture of an "inside-out" process whereby Japan was not a subservient and reactive partner of the United States despite the asymmetrical relationship forged at the time under the occupation. . . . The study thus provokes us to think about the contemporary relevance and broader lessons beyond one case study. . . . It will be a rewarding read for diplomatic historians and for those interested in an early chapter of U.S.-Japan relations. . . . -- Dennis T. Yasutomo, Smith College * The Journal of Japanese Studies *
In an account that looks at 'both sides of the hill,' Robert Eldridge gives us a look at a small but significant issue in the story of how two powers only recently the bitterest and deadliest of foes could put aside the hatred of war and build a solid relationship that was better for both than what had come before. . . . Eldridge is a master storyteller and renders his account in smooth prose that shows he is rapidly becoming the foremost historian of U.S.-Japanese relations on either side of the Pacific... -- Nick Sarantakes, Texas A&M University--Commerce
In an account that looks at 'both sides of the hill,' Robert Eldridge gives us a look at a small but significant issue in the story of how two powers only recently the bitterest and deadliest of foes could put aside the hatred of war and build a solid relationship that was better for both than what had come before. . . . Eldridge is a master storyteller and renders his account in smooth prose that shows he is rapidly becoming the foremost historian of U.S.-Japanese relations on either side of the Pacific. -- Nick Sarantakes, Texas A&M University--Commerce

Table of Contents
Chapter 1 U.S. Pre-Reversion Policy toward Amami and Okinawa Chapter 2 The Amami Reversion Movement Chapter 3 The Japanese Government and the "Amami-Okinawa Problem" Chapter 4 The Eisenhower Administration and the Decision to Return the Amami Islands Chapter 5 The Amami Reversion Negotiations and Bilateral Agreement

The Return of the Amami Islands The Reversion

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    A Hardback by Robert D. Eldridge

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      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 27/02/2004
      ISBN13: 9780739107102, 978-0739107102
      ISBN10: 0739107100

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This work documents the drawn-out debates and the decisions that led to the complete reunification of the Amami Islands with Japan. It traces the US military's insistence on occupying Okinawa and the Amami Islands under the rationale of increased international security.

      Trade Review
      Eldridge has produced a well-researched monograph on a relevant but hertofore unexamined epidose in US-Japan relations. . .. Taking advantage of recently declassified US and Japanese documents as well as memoirs and reminiscences of participants from both sides, the author tells for the first time the story of bilateral relations leading to reversion. The book will appeal to students of international and US-Japan relations in post-WWII Asia and the Pacific. * CHOICE *
      With painstakingly detailed accounts of U.S. policy-making meetings, document drafts and debates, Eldridge demonstrates that the Amami Reversion Movement merits greater attention than it has received to date. -- Dennis J. Frost, Columbia University, New York, NY, U.S.A. * Pacific Affairs, Vol. 78, No. 1 --Spring 2005 *
      The book provides a good picture of civil society activism early in Japan's fledging democracy. . . . [Eldridge] paints a picture of an "inside-out" process whereby Japan was not a subservient and reactive partner of the United States despite the asymmetrical relationship forged at the time under the occupation. . . . The study thus provokes us to think about the contemporary relevance and broader lessons beyond one case study. . . . It will be a rewarding read for diplomatic historians and for those interested in an early chapter of U.S.-Japan relations. . . . -- Dennis T. Yasutomo, Smith College * The Journal of Japanese Studies *
      In an account that looks at 'both sides of the hill,' Robert Eldridge gives us a look at a small but significant issue in the story of how two powers only recently the bitterest and deadliest of foes could put aside the hatred of war and build a solid relationship that was better for both than what had come before. . . . Eldridge is a master storyteller and renders his account in smooth prose that shows he is rapidly becoming the foremost historian of U.S.-Japanese relations on either side of the Pacific... -- Nick Sarantakes, Texas A&M University--Commerce
      In an account that looks at 'both sides of the hill,' Robert Eldridge gives us a look at a small but significant issue in the story of how two powers only recently the bitterest and deadliest of foes could put aside the hatred of war and build a solid relationship that was better for both than what had come before. . . . Eldridge is a master storyteller and renders his account in smooth prose that shows he is rapidly becoming the foremost historian of U.S.-Japanese relations on either side of the Pacific. -- Nick Sarantakes, Texas A&M University--Commerce

      Table of Contents
      Chapter 1 U.S. Pre-Reversion Policy toward Amami and Okinawa Chapter 2 The Amami Reversion Movement Chapter 3 The Japanese Government and the "Amami-Okinawa Problem" Chapter 4 The Eisenhower Administration and the Decision to Return the Amami Islands Chapter 5 The Amami Reversion Negotiations and Bilateral Agreement

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