Yakuza: A 400-Year History of the Japanese Underworld
By: Andrew Rankin
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‘Gripping and revealing … A must read.’ Ryan Gingeras, author of Mafia: A Global History
The definitive, utterly engrossing history of Japanese organized crime, from the samurai era to the present
Japan’s gangster groups, known collectively as the yakuza, are among the oldest underworld societies in the world. With military-style organization and a code of absolute obedience, they have run Japan’s black markets for centuries. They have remained strikingly conspicuous in Japanese society, and as a cultural force beyond Japan, with movies and video games celebrating their exploits globally. However, yakuza is still a word that cannot be uttered easily in polite conversation in Japan.
This is a mob story like no other. The yakuza’s main business activities – control of gambling games, protection rackets, and the sex trade – are typical of other mafia groups, but their culture and mythology are distinctively Japanese, and their history is inseparable from the social transformations of Japan over the centuries.
In this gripping popular history, Andrew Rankin tells the full story of the yakuza for the first time, from their emergence out of seventeenth-century samurai gang culture to the present day. He draws on material from rare, banned volumes concealed from authorities in private mobster libraries; historical Japanese-language source material hitherto unavailable in English; and extensive interviews with old gangsters.
Featuring a lively cast of extortionists, smugglers, hit men and corporate crime lords, Yakuza is a fascinating tour of Japan’s sprawling mob syndicates and the traditions with which they are so deeply intertwined. This will be the definitive work on the subject for years to come.
‘The best book in English on this fascinating and misunderstood subject… Rich in incident and anecdote, Rankin’s account of the tattooed finger-choppers also serves as a thrilling alternative history of modern Japan.’ Richard Lloyd Parry, author of People Who Eat Darkness
‘Elegantly written and richly informed, this is essential reading for anyone interested in Japan, crime, or the underworld.’ Federico Varese, author of Mafia Life
‘The yakuza book that everyone has been waiting for. The clear-eyed narrative is studded with vivid vignettes and pen portraits… Yakuza is both shrewd and engrossing.’ John Dickie, author of Cosa Nostra
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“Andrew Rankin has written the best book in English on this fascinating and misunderstood subject. With style, irony, and scholarly authority, he traces the evolution of Japan’s gangsters from delinquent samurai through ultranationalist thugs to besuited corporate extortionists. Rich in incident and anecdote, Rankin’s account of the tattooed finger-choppers also serves as a thrilling alternative history of modern Japan.”
- Richard Lloyd Parry, author of People Who Eat Darkness -
“Andrew Rankin has written a fascinating history of the yakuza, drawing on an impressive command of Japanese culture, language, and sources. By situating the organization alongside other mafias around the world, he highlights both its unique features and its broader place within the study of organized crime. Elegantly written and richly informed, this is essential reading for anyone interested in Japan, crime, or the underworld.”
- Federico Varese, author of Mafia Life -
“The yakuza book that everyone has been waiting for. The clear-eyed narrative is studded with vivid vignettes and pen portraits, and the twists and turns of mobster life are securely located in the context of Japan’s tumultuous modernization. Yakuza is both shrewd and engrossing.”
- John Dickie, author of Cosa Nostra -
‘It will be the definitive work in English for a generation now on the subject.’ R.
- Taggart Murphy, author of Japan and the Shackles of the Past -
‘Andrew Rankin’s YakuzaYakuza tells a story that is both gripping and revealing of Japanese culture, politics and society. Those with affection for all things Japanese will love and appreciate Rankin’s knowledge and rich prose. Those with a passion for the world of organized crime will learn a great deal from its depth and insights. A must read regardless.’
- Ryan Gingeras, author of Mafia: A Global History