Thomas William Kinder and the Japanese Imperial Mint, 1868-1875

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An analysis of the phenomenon of the Japanese adopting Western technology but resisting foreign domination during Meiji Japan,
at the hand of the formative period of the Japanese Imperial Mint. The author thereby offers a prime historical study on the interaction between the Japanese government and the West, and its underlying sentiments.
Examining the governmental reforms along Western lines, the transfer of Western technology and the hiring of foreign experts, it is examined how, at the Imperial Mint, this process was wholely dominated by the British. Focusing on the role of the director of the Mint, Thomas William Kinder, the author concludes that Kinder was much more than a mere technocrat but a key player in the decision-making process. This very fact, the volume clearly points out, was the major factor leading to the removal of these foreign experts from the Mint.

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Roy S. Hanashiro, Ph.D. (1988) in History, University of Hawaii, is an Associate Professor at the University of Michigan-Flint. He has published several articles on the Japanese Imperial Mint including The Japanese Imperial Mint and the Issue of Jurisdiction over Foreign Employees (Journal of Asian History, 1996).
'...there is no doubt that Hanashiro has contributed greatly to enlightening scholars of banking and fiscal history. Now that the Kinder myth ahs been exposed by Hanashiro, other fields have emerged which could be researched to good advantage.'
Norio Tamaki, Journal of Royal Asiatic Society, 2000.
All those interested in Japanese history, the history of modernization, the history of industrialization, the history of international law, as well as comparative history on these topics.
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