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Bending Adversity: Japan and the Art of Survival Hardcover – 13 Mar 2014

4.4 out of 5 stars 24 customer reviews

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--This text refers to the Paperback edition.

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 382 pages
  • Publisher: Penguin Press (13 Mar. 2014)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1594205841
  • ISBN-13: 978-1594205842
  • Product Dimensions: 16.1 x 3.3 x 23.5 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (24 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,835,216 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Review

Bending Adversity is a superb reappraisal of the so-called 'lost decade(s)' of contemporary Japan. David Pilling combines a historian's breadth of vision, an anthropologist's clearheadedness, an investigator's knack of knowing what questions to ask, an economist's grasp of the circuitry of money and a top-notch journalist's curiosity about the human effects of political causes. The result
is a probing, nourishing and independent-minded book for any reader seeking to understand modern Japan and its unsure place in the world

(David Mitchell)

Fascinating and well-researched ... Pilling's experience as a journalist lends Bending Adversity a welcome veracity it might otherwise have lacked ... the six sections are written lucidly and contain a wealth of useful information ... Pilling went to the area where the tsunami struck on several occasions and his reportage from those experiences is the best writing here - poignant, insightful, understated, heart breaking but also often uplifting ... This book does an excellent job of demonstrating just how resilient the Japanese people have been in the face of recent environmental, social, and economic disaster (Independent)

Bending Adversity does an excellent job of reappraising [Japan's] lost years of economic deflation and social and political stagnation ... There has to be a way, says Pilling, that we can live without growth. This fascinating and timely book shows us where to look for it (Spectator)

Pilling, like many writers who come to love Japan and enjoy its many eccentricities, wants to rescue it from the standard one-dimensional images of the country as some sort of model or cautionary tale ... we need to read this book and find that Japan is a much more interesting and engaging place, for all its flaws and frustrations, than the drama theorists would have us believe (Bill Emmott Literary Review)

A superb book on contemporary Japan that, better than any other I have read, manages to get the reader inside the skin of Japanese society ... astutely observed ... a great read brimming with insights and ... crafting a colourful and rounded analysis, one that doesn't shy from criticism, but also veers away from shrill harangue. It is evident that Pilling is keen on Japan, but it is not a naive embrace. I admire his knack for finding the fault-line in most any debate about Japan and fairly summarizing both sides... delivering a balanced assessment that sidesteps what he terms the 'sneering bitterness' that animates much analysis of contemporary Japan. Along the way, readers encounter a diversity of perspectives that subvert tropes of uniformity and conformity (Japan Times)

Pilling draws on his own experiences, as well as interviews with novelists, academics, politicians, former prime ministers, executives, bankers, activists, and citizens young and old to provide a probing and insightful portrait of contemporary Japan (Publishers Weekly)

Breaking Adversity is a fascinating read for anyone with an interest in economics and politics eager to know more about how a significant world power got to the top tables of international diplomacy. However, it has more to offer than just this. Pilling is every bit as interesting when he tells the stories of the everyday Japanese behind the headlines, and how their self-image as a nation has been forced to change several times during the course of the country's transition into the modern world (Sunday Business Post)

Eloquent and ambitious ... as a financial journalist, [Pilling makes] coherent and interesting arguments about the real nature of Japanese economic decline and explaining that its huge government debt is not necessarily a portent of doom ... powerful (Sunday Times)

David Pilling is an Anglo expert on Japan ... authoritative and entertaining ... [Pilling] deftly manages the trick of illustrating grand sweep with small anecdote (Observer)

Not the least of the merits of Pilling's hugely enjoyable and perceptive book on Japan is that he places the denunciations of two allegedly 'lost decades' in the context of what the country is really like and its actual achievements (Financial Times)

The first major book on Japan for many years, and an entertaining, knowledgeable and surprising analysis of the country and its culture (Bookseller)

Pilling, the Asia editor of the Financial Times, is perfectly placed to be our guide, and his insights are a real rarity when very few Western journalists communicate the essence of the world's third largest economy in anything but the most superficial ways. Here, there is a terrific selection of interview subjects mixed with great reportage and fact selection ... Exhilarating (Daily Telegraph)

An affectionate, beautifully written and counter-intuitively optimistic take on the country, which stresses Japan's ability to reinvent itself (Gideon Rachman Financial Times BOOKS OF THE YEAR) --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

About the Author

David Pilling is the Asia Editor of the Financial Times. He was Tokyo Bureau Chief from 2002-08, and has won several awards for his columns on Japan and China. He is currently based in Hong Kong. --This text refers to the Paperback edition.


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Format: Paperback Verified Purchase
David Pilling spent most of the 2000s as the FT correspondent in Japan – he brings an Anglo-centric understanding to try to unravel Japan for foreigners. He succeeds.

Three of his big themes struck a chord with me (I’ve added my own more up to date data– he was writing back in 2013.)

1) Japan isn’t the basket-case portrayed in the Western press.

It’s still big and rich. The world’s third largest economy (half as big again as Germany) and the world’s largest external creditor (70% more net foreign assets than China). It earned $157 billion on its foreign investments in 2014 (the equivalent of Vietnam’s entire GDP).

It’s actually grown more than USA or UK since 2002 – when measured in terms of real, per capita terms (0.9% pa vs 0.8% USA or 0.7% UK). The headline figure in the USA is flattered owing to higher population growth and inflation.

While GDP per capita is about 25% lower than the USA (and 7% lower than the UK) – its quality of life indicators are spectacular:
- life expectancy (83) is 5 years longer than the US;
- murder rates are a fifth of US levels, and prison population less than a tenth (0.7% of Americans are in prison).
- unemployment is 3.3% versus 5.5% in the USA,
- the most equal income distribution in the G20.

It’s pulled off this affluent poverty by borrowing. Public sector debt (200% of GDP) is double the level of the UK, and it’s private sector debt is huge too (188% versus 140% in the UK.

2) Japan is capable of explosive change
- From feudalism to emperor worship in 3 years (1868 Meiji restoration), and from emperor worship to democracy in 3 months.
- 10% economic growth annually 1950-1973 – never previously achieved in history by any major nation.
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Format: Kindle Edition Verified Purchase
I read this book while living in rural Japan, so hopefully this will add some legitimacy to my review.

What this books offers is very commonly lost by many authors when writing about Japan. The author takes a balanced, level-headed and fair approach to Japan. Most books fall into one of two camps - either the "everything about Japan is fantastic and it's the best country on Earth" camp of the "Japan is so weird and backward and it is doomed because the Japanese don't understand the outside world" camp. This book provides a much more robust and accurate analysis of contemporary Japan, and I found that immensely valuable as it gives room for the author to reach some very interesting insights (both to the long-term resident of Japan and the uninitiated). Another point that sets this book apart is the access the author had to high-ranking public officials and widely respected figures of public life in Japan. These interviews add a layer of validity that other books on Japan do not have.

The author has a very accessible right style which mostly outweighs some of the issue of structure in the book. Generally speaking this book was a highly enjoyable and engrossing read.
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Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
I know relatively little about Japan and was looking for a quick bit of background reading to give me some sense of the country and its people and I found this book did just that. Really clearly written and not difficult to read. I would give it 5 stars but got a bit bogged down in some of the more technical economic sections.
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At heart, this is a "Me and Japan" book by a one-time Japan-based FT correspondent.

It is therefore very well written.

But it doesn't really come down on any particular side of the particular debate alluded to in the title.

That said, though, just raising a potential positive flag against Japan is a valuable and thought-provoking contribution to what can otherwise be simple Japan-(economy)-bashing on the part of most other books of potential relevance.
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Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
This book is an enthralling read. David Pilling clearly knows Japan intimately and although he has huge affection for the country his analysis does not avoid some difficult questions. He is even handed with both the country and its people, drawing significantly on how Japan recovered from the earthquake in 2011.

In addition, as the author points out, Japan is some way ahead of the curve in dealing with the challenges faced by post-affluent societies. In the UK we can learn a great deal from what Japan has experienced in economic and social terms in the last twenty years.

Bending Adversity is written in a fluent style that manages to make both an interesting yet easy read.

Highly recommended.
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Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
Really excellent, indeed outstanding. The “big picture” is complemented by multiple encounters of people with different backgrounds, personalities, ideas, demonstrating so well the point the author makes makes that, yes, there is diversity in Japan, even if it is sometimes not easy to discern! Actually there may be more diversity and individuality among the “little people” than the elites whose education system provides them with the proverbial rod to insert up their backsides. It is a very affectionate perspective on Japan, that is quite clear, while at the same time unrelentingly criticising what there is to be criticised, especially on the xenophobic and revisionist fronts. Pilling has achieved difficult-to-achieve balance.
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