The ANU Japan Institute Seminar Series showcases cutting-edge research by leading and emerging scholars based primarily in Australia and Japan.

VENUE: HYBRID

IN-PERSON: Institutes Boardroom, Coombs Extension Building, 8 Fellows Road, ACTON, ACT 2601

ONLINE: Zoom. Please select the relevant ticket, in-person or online, according to your preferred attendance mode.

Tojo: The Rise and Fall of Japan's Most Controversial World War II General

The military general who became Emperor Hirohito’s prime minister, Tojo Hideki is most often remembered as an iron-fisted leader who dragged Japan into World War II and—after spectacular losses—was eventually executed as a war criminal. Yet Tojo was far more than his ignominious end. In fact, as Peter Mauch argues, he was one of the twentieth century’s most accomplished military statesmen.

Over a career of some forty years, Tojo successfully launched himself into the highest echelons of political power. He was not only a tactical genius, Mauch shows, but also a savvy administrator, a fierce imperialist, and a deeply loyal advisor to the emperor. Tojo’s career took off with the notorious Kwantung Army in Manchuria, where he played a key role in escalating the Sino-Japanese War during the 1930s. As he rose through the ranks, becoming minister of war and then army chief of staff, he honed the efficiency of the Imperial Army and enhanced its influence within the emperor’s court. All the while, he deftly negotiated the fractious military rivalries that arose wherever he went. Brilliant, ambitious, and often ruthless, Tojo reached political heights that were perhaps matched only by his precipitous fall in the final months of World War II.                    


Speaker

Dr Peter Mauch teaches Asian history at Western Sydney University (Australia). He has authored Sailor Diplomat: Nomura Kichisaburo and the Japanese American War (Harvard, 2011), and Tojo: The Rise and Fall of Japan’s Most Controversial World War II General (Belknap, 2026). He is currently preparing with Gordon M Berger (USC) and Roger H Brown (Saitama University) an annotated translation of Emperor Hirohito’s so-called monologue. He is also writing a full-length biography of Hirohito (Harvard University Press, under contract). 

Discussant

Dr Andrew Levidis is a historian and Lecturer in Modern Japanese History at the Australian National University with broad interests in intellectual and political history, international history, Cold War, and twentieth century East Asia. He is presently completing work a political and intellectual biography of Kishi Nobusuke and modern Japanese conservatism.

Chair

Professor Simon Avenell 
is a Professor in the School of Culture, History, and Language, ANU College of Asia and the Pacific. He specialises in modern Japanese history, postwar Japan (1945~), civic activism, civil society, social history, and political history.

This talk is co-sponsored by the Modern Japan History Association.

Image: Tojo Hideki, supplied by Peter Mauch. 


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Seminar

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In-person and online

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IN-PERSON: Institutes Boardroom, HC Coombs Extension Building 8, 8 Fellows Road ANU, ACTON, ACT 2601; ONLINE: Zoom

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