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"大正天皇(Emperor Taishō)." Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Wikimedia Foundations, Inc. 31 December 1956. Web. Apr 2015.
"Naval ensign of the Imperial Japanese Navy and the Japanese Maritime Self-Defense Force." Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Wikimedia
Foundations, Inc. 21 May 2001. Web. Apr 2015.
"Sino-japanese War, Second." The Columbia Encyclopedia. New York: Columbia University Press, 2015. Credo Reference. Web. Apr 2015.
"Map showing the extent of Japanese occupation in 1940" Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Wikimedia Foundations, Inc. 5 November 2012.
Web. Apr 2015.
"World War Ii." The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy, Houghton Mifflin. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2002. Credo Reference. Web. Apr 2015.
"The Pacific Theater of War 1941-1945." The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy, Houghton Mifflin. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2002. Credo
Reference. Web. Apr 2015.
WorldOfJapan. "Hirohito 1945." Historical Reenactment Video. Youtube. Youtube, 30 July 2013. Web. Apr 2015.
Ellington, Lucien. "Learning from the Japanese Economy." Stanford Program on International and Cross-Cultural Education. Stanford
University, September 2004. Web. Apr 2015.
Smith, Noah. "GDP per Capita Japan." Blogspot. Blogger, 10 August 2014. Web. Apr 2015.
"Hirohito in 1902 as a Baby." Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Wikimedia Foundations, Inc. 1902. Web. Apr 2015.
"Emperor Hirohito after his Enthronement Ceremony in 1928." Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Wikimedia Foundations, Inc. 1928. Web.
Apr 2015.
"Emperor Hirohito and Douglas MacArthur, at their first meeting, at the U.S. Embassy, Tokyo, 27 September 1945." Wikipedia, the Free
Encyclopedia. Wikimedia Foundations, Inc. 27 September 1945. Web. Apr 2015.
"Emperor Showa visited Hiroshima in 1947." Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Asahi Shimbun Co. Wikimedia Foundations, Inc. 1947. Web.
Apr 2015.
"Hirohito's tomb in Hachioji, Tokyo." Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Wikimedia Foundations, Inc. n.d. Web. Apr 2015.
"Emperor Hirohito and U.S. President Ronald Reagan, Tokyo, November 9, 1983." Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Wikimedia Foundations,
Inc. 9 November 1983. Web. Apr 2015.
"Japanese Bow to Emperor Hirohito After Surrender Broadcast." World War 2 Database. MFA Productions LLC, Tokyo Prefecture. 15 August
1945. Web. Apr 2015.
"The Emperor as head of the Imperial General Headquarters in 1943." Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Wikimedia Foundations, Inc. 1943.
Web. Apr 2015.
"Politics Under Meiji Constitution." Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Wikimedia Foundations, Inc. n.d. Web. Apr 2015.
Gluck, Carol, and Stephen Richards Graubard, eds. Showa: The Japan of Hirohito. New York: Norton, 1992. Print.
Gordijn, Ernestine H., and Diederik A. Stapel. “When Controversial Leaders with Charisma Are Effective: The Influence of Terror on the
Need for Vision and Impact of Mixed Attitudinal Messages.” European Journal of Social Psychology 38.3 (2008): 389–411. EBSCOhost.
Web. 2 Apr. 2015.
Honjō, Shigeru. Emperor Hirohito and His Chief Aide-de-Camp: The Honjō Diary, 1933-36. Tokyo: University of Tokyo Press, 1982. Print.
Hoyt, Edwin Palmer. Hirohito: The Emperor and the Man. New York: Praeger, 1992. Print.
Nofil, Hillary. “Shinto and State.” Earlham College, Richmond, IN. 1 Apr 2015. Senior Capstone Presentation.