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Tables of Contents for Becoming Apart
Chapter/Section Title
Page #
Page Count
Tables, Maps, and Figures
xiii
 
Measures and Money
xvii
 
Introduction
Fixing Borders: Toyama's Political Restoration
17
22
Fixing Borders
18
6
Ideology, Interests, and Prefectural Independence
24
4
Central Considerations
28
8
Conclusion
36
3
Losing Ground: The Restoration and the Local Economy
39
34
The Pre-Meiji Regional Economy
41
7
Losing Ground: Imperial Restoration and Local Economic Decline
48
22
Conclusion
70
3
Rivers, Policies, and River Politicians
73
45
The Rivers
76
9
Restoration and River Controls: The Emergence of a National Policy
85
1
The Need for River Politics
85
5
River Politicians: Inagaki Shimesu
90
17
Partymen and Prefectural Officials as Agents of Local Improvement
107
6
Conclusion
113
5
Popular Protest: Rice, Steamships, and Power
118
70
The Bandori Riots, 1869
123
4
The Tode Protests, 1877
127
7
The 1878 Steamship Protests and Market Riots of 1890 and 1918
134
7
Electric Power, Loggers, and the Anti-Dam Movement, 1922-1933
141
28
Power Rate Protests, 1927 and 1928
169
13
Conclusion
182
6
Local Imperialism and the Chimera of Progress
188
57
The Local Press: Imperial Motives
191
10
From Ideas to Implementation: Local Elites and Imperial Policies and Programs
201
21
Grassroots Imperialism
222
18
Conclusion
240
5
Epilogue: Continuities
245
20
Center and Region Revisited: Ties That Bind and Fetter
247
3
Economic Fragility and Population Stagnation
250
2
Domestic Dependencies: Rivers. Bullet Trains, and Parry Politics
252
4
International Considerations: Hands Across the Sea
256
3
Defending Local Welfare: Postwar Protest and Resistance
259
6
Reference Matter
Notes
265
44
Bibliography
309
20
Index
329