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In a single night a railway blast barely bent the steel-and yet it opened an era. This book tells how a minor "incident" became a doctrine, how a puppet state became a model, and how the world learned to rationalise looking away. It follows the threads from Manchuria 1931 and the Mukden Incident through the invention of Manchukuo, the swagger of the Kwantung Army, and the committees that promised order while delivering delay-the League of Nations failure distilled. Along the way, it shows why doctrines like the Stimson Doctrine sounded firm but changed little, and how the slow march on the…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
In a single night a railway blast barely bent the steel-and yet it opened an era. This book tells how a minor "incident" became a doctrine, how a puppet state became a model, and how the world learned to rationalise looking away. It follows the threads from Manchuria 1931 and the Mukden Incident through the invention of Manchukuo, the swagger of the Kwantung Army, and the committees that promised order while delivering delay-the League of Nations failure distilled. Along the way, it shows why doctrines like the Stimson Doctrine sounded firm but changed little, and how the slow march on the road to Pearl Harbor began with stories people wanted to believe. This is for readers who suspect that headlines repeat because the playbook repeats. It will appeal to those interested in Japanese ultranationalism, diplomatic evasions, and the operational mechanics that turn slogans into sovereignty. You will come away with a clear framework to spot staged crises, deniability games, and the tactics that precede open war-insights drawn from the Lytton Commission papers to the shipping logs of the Asia Pacific war origins. - What actually deters an aggressor-and what merely buys them time - How economic shock, propaganda, and legal formalism combine to normalise conquest - Why small, early actions beat grand, late gestures If you want rigor without jargon-and a way to read the present with sharper eyes-this narrative equips you to recognise the next Manchuria before it hardens into fate.
Autorenporträt
Sofia Nowak writes about the politics of peace-how institutions promise order and how power, money, and fear decide whether those promises hold. Raised between Warsaw and Brussels, she grew up with maps in the hallway and arguments about treaties at the dinner table, which seeded a lifelong preoccupation with what holds neighbours back from war. Her work moves between Geneva's paper trails and the lived choices of cabinets, drawing on international relations, economic history, and the psychology of decision-making. She favours clear language over slogans, design principles over nostalgia, and the belief that honest accounting of costs is a higher form of idealism. This book continues her project: to read the 1930s without melodrama and to recover hard lessons for the institutions we rely on today.