Bibliographic Information

We were burning : Japanese entrepreneurs and the forging of the electronic age

Bob Johnstone

Basic Books : Cornelia & Michael Bessie Book, 1999

  • : pbk

Available at  / 39 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 385-403) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Volume

ISBN 9780465091171

Description

. Are the Japanese faceless clones who march in lockstep to the drums beaten by big business and the bureaucrats of MITI, Japans miracle-working ministry of international trade and industry? Can Japanese workers, and by extrapolation their entire society, be characterized by deference to authority, devotion to group solidarity, and management by consensus? In We Were Burning, investigative journalist Bob Johnstone demolishes this misleading stereotype by introducing us to a new and very different kind of Japanese worker-a dynamic, iconoclastic, risk-taking entrepreneur. }Are the Japanese faceless clones who march in lockstep to the drums beaten by big business and the bureaucrats of MITI, Japans miracle-working ministry of international trade and industry? Can Japanese workers, and by extrapolation their entire society, be characterized by deference to authority, devotion to group solidarity, and management by consensus? In We Were Burning, investigative journalist Bob Johnstone demolishes this misleading stereotype by introducing us to a new and very different kind of Japanese worker-a dynamic, iconoclastic, risk-taking entrepreneur. Johnstone has tracked down Japans invisible entrepreneurs and persuaded them to tell their stories. He presents here a wealth of new material, including interviews with key players past and present, which lifts the veil that has hitherto obscured the entrepreneurial nature of Japanese companies like Canon, Casio, Seiko, Sharp, and Yamaha.Japanese entrepreneurs, working in the consumer electronics industry during the 1960s and 70s, took unheralded American inventions such as microchip cameras, liquid crystal displays, semiconductor lasers, and sound chips to create products that have become indispensable, including digital calculators and watches, synthesizers, camcorders, and compact disc players. Johnstone follows a dozen micro-electronic technologies from the U.S. labs where they originated to their eventual appearance in the form of Japanese products, shedding new light on the transnational nature of twentieth-century innovation, and on why technologies take root and flourish in some places and not in others. At this time of Asian financial crisis and the bursting of Japans bubble economy, many are tempted to dismiss Japans future as an economic power. We Were Burning serves as a timely warning that to write off Japanand its invisible entrepreneurswould be a big mistake. }

Table of Contents

  • Introduction: A Nation of Transistor Salesmen?
  • Calculators & Watches
  • Doctor Rocket Goes to Disneyland
  • Blind Men Dont Fear Snakes
  • The Race Is Not to the Swift
  • The Lunatics Have Taken Over the Asylum
  • Under-the-Table Research
  • Camcorders & Synthesizers
  • The Man Who Loved Gossip
  • The Sound of One Chip Clapping
  • CD Players & Printers
  • Cars & Lights
  • Many Hands Make Light Work
  • Doctor Nishizawa, I Presume?
  • The End of Edison
  • CD Players & Printers.
Volume

: pbk ISBN 9780465091188

Description

Are the Japanese faceless clones who march in lockstep to the drums beaten by big business and the bureaucrats of MITI, Japan's miracle-working ministry of international trade and industry? Can Japanese workers, and by extrapolation their entire society, be characterized by deference to authority, devotion to group solidarity, and management by consensus? In We Were Burning, investigative journalist Bob Johnstone demolishes this misleading stereotype by introducing us to a new and very different kind of Japanese worker-a dynamic, iconoclastic, risk-taking entrepreneur.Johnstone has tracked down Japan's invisible entrepreneurs and persuaded them to tell their stories. He presents here a wealth of new material, including interviews with key players past and present, which lifts the veil that has hitherto obscured the entrepreneurial nature of Japanese companies like Canon, Casio, Seiko, Sharp, and Yamaha.Japanese entrepreneurs, working in the consumer electronics industry during the 1960s and 70s, took unheralded American inventions such as microchip cameras, liquid crystal displays, semiconductor lasers, and sound chips to create products that have become indispensable, including digital calculators and watches, synthesizers, camcorders, and compact disc players. Johnstone follows a dozen micro-electronic technologies from the U.S. labs where they originated to their eventual appearance in the form of Japanese products, shedding new light on the transnational nature of twentieth-century innovation, and on why technologies take root and flourish in some places and not in others.At this time of Asian financial crisis and the bursting of Japan's bubble economy, many are tempted to dismiss Japan's future as an economic power. We Were Burning serves as a timely warning that to write off Japan,and its invisible entrepreneurs,would be a big mistake.

Table of Contents

  • * Introduction: A Nation of Transistor Salesmen? Calculators & Watches * Doctor Rocket Goes to Disneyland * Blind Men Dont Fear Snakes * The Race Is Not to the Swift * The Lunatics Have Taken Over the Asylum * Under-the-Table Research Camcorders & Synthesizers * The Man Who Loved Gossip * The Sound of One Chip Clapping CD Players & Printers
  • Cars & Lights * Many Hands Make Light Work * Doctor Nishizawa, I Presume? * The End of Edison * CD Players & Printers

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