As I see it | Forget Weimar, it’s Japan’s Taisho period we need to talk about

As I see it | Forget Weimar, it’s Japan’s Taisho period we need to talk about



People always talk knowingly about Weimar, a period of extremes: artistic and social-sexual decadence, democratic liberalism and the radicalisation of the left and the right, before Germany’s descent into Hitlerian hell. The city as a symbol, close to the site of the former Buchenwald concentration camp, is back in the news, well, at least the op-ed pages of the Western press.

That’s rarely a good sign. “The new crisis [in Germany] seems uncomfortably familiar because, in some respects, it resembles the one that engulfed the Weimar Republic a century ago,” Katja Hoyer, author of Weimar: Life on the Edge of Catastrophe, wrote in Bloomberg.

I leave it to erudite commentators to fret about the return of Weimar as a political metaphor and its implications for the future of Germany and Europe.

Those of us from Asia ought to reflect more on something similar but usually ignored: the Taisho period in Japan. This liberal but unstable period partially coincided with Weimar and was essentially the Japanese version of it. And, of course, it was followed by the Early Showa period, which was characterised by fanatical militarism that eventually turned most of Asia into a living hell.

Today, after a long period of pacifism, hardline Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi and her right-wing cabinet openly embrace rearmament and remilitarisation. Going nuclear could again be on the political agenda. All this risks a regional arms race, all cheered on by the United States and the European Union.

But it looks eerily like a repeat of the Taisho period before all hell broke loose. No wonder Japan’s neighbours are unnerved.

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