As the world's only major industrial society yet to emerge from outside
the Western tradition, Japan has evolved into an industrial state very
different from those of the West. Robert Smith argues that this
difference is found not so much in organisational and institutional
forms as in the Japanese view of the relationship of individuals to one
another and to society as a whole. He traces the origin of this
difference to the historical traditions of Japan, which rest on cultural
premises quite unlike those of the Western world. His compelling and
convincing analysis of contemporary Japanese society has far-reaching
implications for our understanding of the nature of the modern
industrial world.