The History of Motorization in Japan

S. Townsend
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Abstract

This is an advance summary of a forthcoming article in the Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Asian History. Please check back later for the full article. In 1907 the first Japanese-made motorcar was unveiled. A century later, the phenomenon of kuruma banare [車離れ], literally “turning one’s back on the car,” but often translated as “de-motorization,” appeared in the international press. Falling sales suggested that Japan’s domestic car market had reached full capacity reversing an almost continuous historical trend of increasing car ownership. In the 1960s and 1970s, personal car ownership changed the social and cultural fabric of everyday life and transformed the urban environment and landscape. However, the automobile also became the focus of anxieties about traffic congestion, air pollution, noise levels, and safety and by the end of the 20th century was seen as ultimately damaging to community, social harmony, and the environment. While reports of the death of the motorcar turned out to be exaggerations, Japan became the “Asian pathfinder” for setting ultimate limits for the growth of fossil-fueled automobiles worldwide. Historiographically, the focus on the astounding success of Japan’s major automobile manufacturers in international markets drew attention away from the social and cultural history of the car itself in Japan. Yet the story of how Japan was transformed from an essentially wheel-less society at the dawn of the 20th century into the first industrial power to have achieved almost full-capacity car ownership is no less remarkable and sheds light on current dilemmas surrounding car use and sustainability in developing countries such as China and India.
日本机动化的历史
这是《牛津亚洲历史研究百科全书》即将发表的一篇文章的摘要。请稍后查看全文。1907年,第一辆日本制造的汽车亮相。一个世纪后,kuruma banare(字面意思是“背对汽车”,但通常被翻译为“去机动化”)出现在国际媒体上。销量下降表明,日本国内汽车市场已达到满负荷状态,扭转了几乎持续不断的汽车保有量增长的历史趋势。在20世纪60年代和70年代,个人拥有汽车改变了日常生活的社会和文化结构,改变了城市环境和景观。然而,汽车也成为人们对交通拥堵、空气污染、噪音水平和安全的担忧的焦点,到20世纪末,人们认为汽车最终会损害社区、社会和谐和环境。虽然关于汽车消亡的报道被证明是夸大其词,但日本成为了为全球化石燃料汽车的增长设定终极限制的“亚洲探路者”。从史学的角度来看,对日本主要汽车制造商在国际市场上取得的惊人成功的关注,转移了人们对日本汽车本身的社会和文化史的关注。然而,日本如何从20世纪初一个基本上没有车轮的社会,转变为第一个实现汽车几乎满负荷拥有的工业大国的故事,同样引人注目,并揭示了中国和印度等发展中国家目前围绕汽车使用和可持续性的困境。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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