Kerry Smith is Associate Professor of History and East Asian Studies at Brown University.
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Description
"This book argues persuasively that disaster as a process is endemic to modern Japan, that it is something that has framed the course of Japan's recent history. Based on an enormous amount of research in a wide range of sources-including the popular press, scientific treatises, personal papers and interviews with individuals-this volume successfully exposes the social experience of, and society's response to, the persistent presence of potential and actual earthquake disasters in Japan over its recent history. It is an extremely well-written, in-depth study accessible to a wide readership...It fully deserves the widest possible readership and will be a yardstick in this area of study for some time to come." (History: Reviews of New Books) "Smith makes a valuable contribution to the literature that illuminates how countries facing similar hazards with access to the same technology and knowledge can nonetheless find themselves managing disasters in radically different ways. The story of earthquake predication in Japan offers a reminder that the practice of emergency management and disaster risk reduction is inseparable from questions of culture and history, and that effectively protecting communities from disaster will never simply be a matter of copying 'best practice' from somewhere else." (Australian Outlook) "An authoritative study that documents far more than Japan's chimerical quest to master earthquake prediction. Kerry Smith beautifully illustrates how seismic vulnerability and risk, science and speculation, personal ambition and politics, anticipation and fear, have all shaped Japan's modern approach to earthquakes and thus the nation we know today. Innovative, imaginative, and provocative, Predicting Disasters is a thoroughly compelling read." (J. Charles Schencking, author of The Great Kanto Earthquake and the Chimera of National Reconstruction in Japan) "Kerry Smith masterfully narrates the ways in which Japanese seismologists' promise of earthquake prediction have played out against the geological reality and socioeconomic conditions of Japan since the late nineteenth century. Predicting Disasters is not only an excellent history of Japanese seismology but also a vivid testimony to the fact that paradigm shifts in science can be a gradual and arduous process." (Yoshikuni Igarashi, author of Japan, 1972: Visions of Masculinity in an Age of Mass Consumerism)