The teaching of history in South African and Japanese schools has
attracted sustained criticism for the alleged attempts to conceal the
controversial aspects of their countries' past and to inculcate
ideologies favourable to the ruling regimes. This book is the first
attempt to systematically compare the ways in which education
bureaucracy in both nations dealt with opposition and critics in the
period from ca. 1945 to 1995, when both countries were dominated by
single-party governments for most of the fifty years. The author argues
that both South African and Japanese education bureaucracy did not
overtly express its intentions in the curriculum documents or in the
textbooks, but found ways to enhance its authority through a range of
often subtle measures. A total of eight themes in 60 officially approved
Standard 6 South African and Japanese middle-school history textbooks
have been selected to demonstrate the changes and continuity. This work
contributes to the existing literature of comparative history by drawing
lessons that would probably not have emerged from the study of either
country by itself.