Japanese Imperialism & Interwar Period
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Arizona State University *
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101
Subject
History
Date
May 4, 2024
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6
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Why did Japan become an imperial nation?
Objectives:
Identify the causes for Japanese imperialism.
Introduction
Directions: Examine the images below and answer the questions that follow.
REVIEW and PREDICT
European countries industrialized in the late 1700s
and 1800s.
Photograph of Widnes, England in the late 19th century.
Image
is courtesy of wikimedia commons and is in the pubic domain
1. What natural resources did they need to support
the process of industrialization?
They needed coal to support the process of
industrialization.
World empires and colonies in 1914, just before the First World
War.
Image
is courtesy of wikimedia commons and is
is licensed under the
Creative Commons
Attribution 3.0 Unported
license
.
2. What did European countries do starting in the
mid-1800s to acquire more natural resources?
European countries started colonizing to acquire
more natural resources.
In the late 1800s, Japan entered a period of
industrialization also.
Source: James L. Huffman, Modern Japan, A History in Documents,
Oxford University Press from the NYS Global History and Geography
Regents Exam, June 2010.
3. What was the name of the Japanese period of
industrialization that started in the late 1800s?
The name of the Japanese period of industrialization
that started in the late 1800s was Modern Japan.
4. The islands of Japan, unlike most countries in
Europe, did not naturally have the raw materials
needed to industrialize further. What do you
predict Japan will do to support industrialization?
Japan would colonize other countries to support
industrialization.
Japanese Geography and the Problem with Industrialization
During the
Meiji Restoration
(1868-1890), the
Japanese studied the political, economic, and social
institutions of the Western powers and selectively
adopted certain institutions to meet their needs. For
example, they modeled their constitution and
government after Western European ones, but gave
their emperor more power than European kings had in
limited monarchies. They also elevated the status of
merchants, a class that had been looked down upon
in Japanese society but was respected in the West. A
national military and universal conscription were
established, and compulsory public education was
introduced both to teach the skills needed for the new
nation and to teach values of citizenship in all
Japanese.
Most importantly, the Japanese industrialized during
the Meiji Restoration and experienced many of the
same effects that England had earlier in the century.
Cities grew as more Japanese moved from farming
into jobs in factories and offices. In the countryside
larger landlords came to own more and more land,
and the number of poor tenants increased.
Unlike England, who had an abundance of coal and
other natural resources necessary for industrialization,
Japan had very few of these raw materials. Instead,
the Japanese traded for raw materials to fuel their
factories and make their products. In the 1920s, for
example, the Japanese traded goods like steel and
silk stockings, which were very popular in the United
States, for raw materials. The strategy of trading for
natural resources worked well for Japan until the Great
Depression hit the world in 1929. [You will learn more
about the Great Depression in a later lesson.] As a
result of the Great Depression, foreign governments
and companies had little money to spend on
Japanese goods.
Source: Adapted from “Japan’s Modern History: An Outline of the Period.” Asia for Educators.
http://afe.easia.columbia.edu/timelines/japan_modern_timeline.htm
5.
In terms of access to natural
resources, how did Japan differ
from England?
6. How did Japan acquire the
natural resources needed for
industrialization before the Great
Depression?
7. What was the effect of the
Great Depression on Japan’s
ability to trade for raw materials?
Japan differs from England
because they automatically had
very few natural resources, and
Japan acquired natural
resources needed for
industrialization before the Great
Japan’s ability to trade for raw
materials weakened after the
Great depression because they
1
traded for resources.
Depression by trading.
had little money to spend on
Japanese goods.
Imperial Japan
To get the raw materials they needed, the Japanese decided to do what European had started earlier in the century:
imperialize. First, the Japanese, with their new industrial strength and modern weapons, renegotiated the unequal treaties
they made with Western nations like the United States when Commodore Matthew Perry forced them to open up to trade.
Then, Japan fought a war against China in 1894-95 over the control of Korea and gained Taiwan, Japan's first colony. In
1902, Japan signed an alliance with Great Britain, which signified a dramatic increase in international status, and in 1904-5,
Japan won a war against Russia, one of the major Western powers. In the process Japan expanded its empire, annexing
Korea in 1910. Japan was allied with the United States and Britain in World War I, and expected territorial gains at the
Versailles peace conference in 1919. Instead Japan met with strong opposition from the United States, and again learned
the lesson that the West regarded imperialism very differently if it was the imperialism of an Asian nation rather than a
European power.
Source: Adapted from “Japan’s Modern History: An Outline of the Period.” Asia for Educators.
http://afe.easia.columbia.edu/timelines/japan_modern_timeline.htm
8. In the 1900s, before the Great
Depression, how did Japan
acquire raw materials for
industrialization?
9. Which countries/regions did
Japan conquer between 1894
and 1940?
10. The text states that after the
Versailles Peace Conference, that
Japan “learned the lesson that the
West regarded imperialism very
differently if it was the imperialism
of an Asian nation rather than a
European power.” Explain what this
means.
Japan acquired raw materials for
industrialization by renegotiating
the unequal treaties and starting
to trade.
Japan conquered Korea and Taiwan
between 1894 and 1940.
This means that even though
Japan was partnered with
Western nations, they didn’t get
the same treatment, due to them
being asians.
11. Summarize: Why did Japan become an imperial nation in the 20th century?
2
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