Japan's Lebensraum in the 18th Centruy

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The concept of lebensraum was most infamously enunciated in the 1920s by the Nazi party, but the practice of expansionism by force in the interwar period was by no means unique to Germany. Manifest Destiny has been referred to as “America’s lebensraum.” Fascist Italy used the notion of spazio vitale to justify expanding beyond its acknowledged borders. Concerned about the rapid pace of Western colonialism, isolated from the community of nations, staggered by economic calamity, desperate for resources and land, and caught in the swells of a rising corporatist, militarist, and nationalistic tide, the Empire of Japan engaged in its own kind of empire-building during the early 20th Century.
In 1853, American Commodore Matthew C. Perry arrived on the shores of Japan with vessels and armaments the likes of which had never been seen in that corner of the world. After ordering some of the buildings in the harbor city of Uraga shelled as a demonstration of might, Perry presented the Japanese with a white flag and a list of demands. The ruling oligarchs of Japan were fearful of the colonialist impulses of the West and embarked upon an ambituous plan to modernize. Within a decade, the Meiji Restoration brought about sweeping changes to how Japan was structured governmentally, economically, socially, and militarily as a direct response to this encounter. The elite warrior class of the samurai was systematically dismantled in favor of a Western-style army.
Within a generation, Japan had become an economic force and the dominant power in the Pacific. Megacorporations called zaibatsu evolved and diversified their way to economic dominance, developing ties with the government and the military through their procurement activities. Meanwhile, d...

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...Bridge, southwest of Beiping. On the evening of 7 July 1937, a small Japanese force on maneuvers near the Marco Polo Bridge demanded entry to the tiny walled town of Wanping under the pretext of searching for one of their soldiers. The Chinese defense force in the town refused the Japanese entry; a shot rang out, and the two sides began firing on each other. The Chinese government, under strong anti-Japanese pressure, refused to make any concessions in the negotiation of the dispute. The Japanese also held firm to their position, and the conflict escalated. As fighting spread to central China, the Japanese recorded a number of successive victories. Japanese government officials, under mounting public pressure not to retreat, sought a quick annexation of China. However, this eluded them, and the two sides embarked into what was to become the Second Sino-Japanese War.

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